University of Sussex
Browse

Synaesthesia is linked to differences in music preference and musical sophistication and a distinctive pattern of sound-colour associations

Download (1021.78 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-03, 12:16 authored by Jamie WardJamie Ward, Stacy Maciel, Romke Rouw, Julia Simner, Nicholas Root
Synaesthesia has often been linked to an artistic or creative temperament, but the nature of this link (and, hence, the candidate underpinning mechanisms) are poorly understood. This study focusses primarily on people with synaesthesia who have visual experiences, including colour, that are induced by music. We determine how this impacts their musical preferences and musical sophistication using previously validated self-report measures and contrast them against non-synaesthetes and synaesthetes with non-musical types. Our data show that people with music-colour synaesthesia gravitate towards certain genres (e.g., Reflective and Complex) and show more active engagement with music relative to controls and other synaesthetes. However, synaesthesia as a whole is also linked to greater musical sophistication (e.g., perceptual abilities). A second study examines in detail the nature of associations from musical notes to colours in synaesthetes relative to non-synaesthetes. Synaesthetes have a distinctive way of associating colours with notes: they are more consistent over time, show a more sensitive pitch-luminance correspondence, and have a distinctive colour palette (e.g., more browns, fewer greens). These indicative features can be used to determine the presence of this form of synaesthesia.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Psychology of Music

ISSN

0305-7356

Publisher

SAGE

Department affiliated with

  • Psychology Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes