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Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

Monthly
160 pp. per issue
8 1/2 x 11, illustrated
Founded: 1989
ISSN 0898-929X
E-ISSN 1530-8898
2008 ISI Impact Factor: 4.867

Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

April 2007, Vol. 19, No. 4, Pages 694-703
Posted Online March 23, 2007.
(doi:10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.694)
© 2007 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Ordinal Linguistic Personification as a Variant of Synesthesia

Julia Simner and Emma Holenstein

University of Edinburgh, UK

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Abstract

This study examines the principles underlying ordinal linguistic personification (OLP): the involuntary and automatic tendency in certain individuals to attribute animate-like qualities such as personality and gender to sequential linguistic units (e.g., letters, numerals, days, months). This article aims to provide four types of evidence that OLP constitutes a form of synesthesia and is likely to have the same neurodevelopmental basis. We show that (a) OLP significantly co-occurs with other variants of synesthesia, (b) OLP associations (like those of synesthesia) are highly consistent over time (Experiment 1), (c) OLP associations (like those of synesthesia) have the characteristic of letter-to-word transference (i.e., they spread from initial letters throughout words) (Experiment 2), and (d) OLP associations (like those of synesthesia) are automatically generated and interfere in Stroop-type tasks (Experiment 3). We argue that these shared characteristics suggest a unified underlying behavior, and propose OLP as a subtype of synesthesia. In so doing, our study extends the range of reported phenomena that are known to be susceptible to cross-modal association.

Cited by

Peter H. Weiss, Andreas Kalckert, Gereon R. Fink. Priming Letters by Colors: Evidence for the Bidirectionality of Grapheme–Color Synesthesia. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 0:0, 1-8
Abstract | PDF (124 KB) | PDF Plus (142 KB) 
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