کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
927641 | 922263 | 2012 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
Researchers have long suspected that grapheme-color synaesthesia is useful, but research on its utility has so far focused primarily on episodic memory and perceptual discrimination. Here we ask whether it can be harnessed during rule-based Category learning. Participants learned through trial and error to classify grapheme pairs that were organized into categories on the basis of their associated synaesthetic colors. The performance of synaesthetes was similar to non-synaesthetes viewing graphemes that were physically colored in the same way. Specifically, synaesthetes learned to categorize stimuli effectively, they were able to transfer this learning to novel stimuli, and they falsely recognized grapheme-pair foils, all like non-synaesthetes viewing colored graphemes. These findings demonstrate that synaesthesia can be exploited when learning the kind of material taught in many classroom settings.
► Participants learned category structures defined by synaesthetic colors.
► Synaesthetes performed similarly to non-synaesthetes viewing real colors.
► Synaesthetic colors can be used for difficult, novel abstractions.
Journal: Consciousness and Cognition - Volume 21, Issue 3, September 2012, Pages 1533–1540