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1 15 subjects who possessed "pitch class-color synesthesia".
2 ilies with AP and 36 multiplex families with synesthesia.
3 lasticity following sensory loss in acquired synesthesia.
4 ypic and genetic relationship between AP and synesthesia.
5  internetwork connectivity in grapheme-color synesthesia.
6 increased functional network connectivity in synesthesia.
7 le of hyperexcitability in the expression of synesthesia.
8  this hyperexcitability in the expression of synesthesia.
9 timulation was specific to the experience of synesthesia.
10 firmed cases of male-to-male transmission of synesthesia.
11 ght be the neural substrate of the patient's synesthesia.
12 o identify the cognitive and neural basis of synesthesia.
13 e consistent with higher-level processing in synesthesia.
14      Studying cognitive processes underlying synesthesia, a condition in which stimulation of one sen
15 of synesthesia, we focus on colored sequence synesthesia, a form in which colors are associated with
16                                              Synesthesia, a neurological condition affecting between
17                                              Synesthesia, an anomalous blending of senses in which st
18 esthesia, including the relationship between synesthesia and attention and the role of meaning in syn
19 re consistent with developmental accounts of synesthesia and illuminate a previously unsuspected pote
20 e this: genetic differences in developmental synesthesia and plasticity following sensory loss in acq
21 e evidence for the existence of this type of synesthesia and show that it correlates with heightened
22  included visual hallucinations, audiovisual synesthesia, and positively experienced derealization an
23                      Absolute pitch (AP) and synesthesia are two uncommon cognitive traits that refle
24       The final part considers developmental synesthesia as an individual difference in cognition and
25      The second part considers the causes of synesthesia both in terms of candidate neural mechanisms
26 alities that are normally separate, and that synesthesia can be caused by inappropriate connections b
27                          We demonstrate that synesthesia can be selectively augmented with cathodal s
28 uch and, for some people with 'mirror-touch' synesthesia, can produce a felt tactile sensation on the
29 and physiological markers for grapheme-color synesthesia; crucially, most also described perceiving c
30                                     Although synesthesia has been known about for 200 years, it is on
31 we systematically evaluate the occurrence of synesthesia in a population of 768 subjects with documen
32 al months before transforming into a form of synesthesia in which auditory stimuli produced tactile p
33 ural substrates of acquired auditory-tactile synesthesia, in which certain sounds can produce an inte
34 iterature with an emphasis on grapheme-color synesthesia, in which viewing letters and numbers induce
35 in the field relating to the neural basis of synesthesia, including the relationship between synesthe
36                         In 'colored-hearing' synesthesia, individuals report color experiences when t
37 ivity of color and grapheme regions during a synesthesia-inducing fMRI paradigm involving rest, audit
38                                              Synesthesia is a condition in which normal stimuli can t
39                                              Synesthesia is a condition in which stimulation of one s
40                                              Synesthesia is a condition where presentation of one per
41                                              Synesthesia is a remarkable, rare condition where an ind
42                                              Synesthesia is an unusual condition characterized by the
43                      These data suggest that synesthesia is better characterized by studying global n
44 ents, we investigated whether grapheme-color synesthesia is characterized by enhanced cortical excita
45 Our results demonstrate that auditory-visual synesthesia is likely to be an oligogenic disorder subje
46    These results suggest that grapheme-color synesthesia is the result of cross-activation between gr
47                                              Synesthesia is widely considered a congenital condition,
48  the review considers the characteristics of synesthesia: its elicited nature, automaticity, prevalen
49  of these 768 subjects, 151 (20.1%) reported synesthesia, most commonly with color.
50 he understanding of the neural mechanisms of synesthesia, our results have important general implicat
51                            Pitch class-color synesthesia represents a newly described type of synesth
52              Consistent with the notion that synesthesia results from hyperconnectivity, functional c
53 sthesia represents a newly described type of synesthesia that is distinct from the well-known crossmo
54                    In this study, we exploit synesthesia to understand how the synesthetic experience
55          Previous studies have characterized synesthesia using resting-state connectivity or stimulus
56                         Of the many forms of synesthesia, we focus on colored sequence synesthesia, a
57                        These self-reports of synesthesia were validated in a subset of 21 study subje
58 hole-genome linkage scan for auditory-visual synesthesia with 410 microsatellite markers at 9.05 cM d
59 dentifying the genetic substrates underlying synesthesia, with important implications for our underst