At 2:30, when you start listing the different types of synesthesia I couldn't help but imagine that this is where people got the idea for auras. Back when we humans assumed everything was controlled by a higher power, we decided that the people who see colors around other people must have some kind of mystical power. Nope, we're just wired a bit different, that's all.
@NesoOnyeuche-vj1sf3 күн бұрын
That actually makes a lot of sense
@Sadenshard3 күн бұрын
Maybe they are able to see something that most of us have lost sight of because its difficult to understand and process and traditionally not as good for survival as using that brain power for other usages or just preserving energy.
@shanonfrancis50713 күн бұрын
Careful you might offend the pseudo science nerds that think that's superstition
@WesaY073 күн бұрын
You might be onto something.
@Mikhail-e9s4 күн бұрын
Someone that has taste-word Synesthesia once told me that my name tastes like strawberry jam. Everytime I think about it, it makes me smile 😊❤
@Techydad4 күн бұрын
Now you just need to find someone whose name tastes like peanut butter and two people whose names taste like bread. 😁
@Mikhail-e9s4 күн бұрын
@Techydad I'll do my best to complete the sandwich! 🥪
@TheDopekitty4 күн бұрын
That sounds like a super fun version to have
@matthewboire68434 күн бұрын
You’re Litterly sweet, wow.
@itsgonnabeanaurfromme4 күн бұрын
Too bad because strawberry is a flavor, not a taste. Having the neurons overlap with association and the area for taste can't have flavor because it includes scent, and jam makes no sense.
@Techydad4 күн бұрын
"Hi smart people, lunchroom spaghetti here!"
@BaronVonQuiply3 күн бұрын
How does it feel to be loved by my entire high school? (Don't get too excited, that was a quarter century ago)
@Astronomy_Nerd-ip5te3 күн бұрын
I had very strong mirror touch synesthesia as a kid. It was so strong that whenever I saw a scene in a movie where someone got stabbed, I used to feel actual pain and I had to leave the situation
@rokess50533 күн бұрын
I feel that more and more strongly over time.
@Rawilow2 күн бұрын
Is that what mirror touch is? I always feel pain when injuries are described to me, be it someone that tells me about it or something I read in text, I always thougt it's to do to with being overly empathic, but maybe it'a a form of synesthesia?
@Astronomy_Nerd-ip5te2 күн бұрын
@@Rawilow Yes, it could be synesthesia if it occurs every single time you witness or hear someone getting an injury or if you feel the sensation of touch if you see someone else getting touched
@rokess50532 күн бұрын
@Rawilow I called it pain synesthesia because it only happens with traumatic things. I think mirror touch is any kind of touch. Maybe what I'm thinking of as pain synesthesia is really just a common phenomenon of like physical empathy.
@WhiteSpatula3 күн бұрын
When I was in grade school, numbers had texture. But by the time I was in high school it had completely disappeared. I have, however, had a few very brief yet vivid flashbacks. They always occur when I’m utterly exhausted and mentally frazzled. Once when I had been driving for over six hours, I saw a Motel 6 sign and suddenly felt that old sensation on my fingertips. I had forgotten how velvety 6 was. It was simultaneously startling and nostalgic.
@bartolomeothesatyr3 күн бұрын
6 is velvety? Fascinating. Do you remember how 7 felt?
@WhiteSpatula3 күн бұрын
@@bartolomeothesatyr 7 was like pumice. 2 was wet. 3 sandy. 4 like citrus rind. 5 (my favorite) was like walking through a forest with fresh and soft young fern brushing your fingertips. 6 velvety. 8 like a flagpole (brushed metal). And 9 like healthy skin. 0 and 1 didn’t do anything. Nor did combinations. Like 23, for example, wasn’t muddy. I imagine that’s why my brain pruned those connections. They were just so arbitrary. But I swear, they were vivid. At the mere sight of any numeral from 2 through 9, all by itself, would literally FEEL their texture at my fingertips.
@howdy45044 күн бұрын
I had very strong synesthesia up until my early 20s ( still have numbers and colors, but most of the other ones have faded). My sister had it too. We would discuss word color synesthesia and agreed on most, but she and I differed greatly on the color of "science" she said it was red and I said it was green. She also disagreed on "math" which I insisted was blue but she insisted was yellow. My number synesthesia is sometimes a bother because many of the colors have slight overlaps. For instance, 2 and 9 are a very similar shade of dark blue (2 is dark blue, but 9 is more navy blue) so I used to mix those two numbers up all the time. 4 and 5 were different shades of dark green, and 6 and 7 were slightly different shades of an orangeish golden yellow. My math teachers were always confused why I would randomly write down or read numbers wrong. I never could explain it to them in a satisfactory way. I also used to have "people" synesthesia. People had their own colors (more like color and pattern). This was bothersome because some people had really tacky colors/patterns. I knew a girl who was bright yellow with pink daisies, it was so ugly, but I felt bad because she was so nice ;-;
@Random_Nobody_Official4 күн бұрын
@@howdy4504 I agree that math is blue, but science is yellow.
@roseopheliashepherd83793 күн бұрын
I won't trust anyone reading my aura unless I get bright yellow and pink daisies 😅
@MelissaThompson4323 күн бұрын
@@Random_Nobody_OfficialI'm with you. Science is definitely yellow. And math is, indeed, blue.
@Shadshar4 күн бұрын
When I was a child my parents regularly bought a TV programme magazine. The days of the week in the magazine were colour-coded, and Friday always was purple. So for me, Friday is purple even without synesthesia 🙂
@charleswolfe88964 күн бұрын
I see Friday as green
@Izzboy-d3t4 күн бұрын
@@charleswolfe8896 me too
@tymmezinni4 күн бұрын
I think this association (like the colors of the magnet letters) is what's happening way more often.
@a_personme4 күн бұрын
i see friday as blue
@10thdoctor154 күн бұрын
If anything, they should go Monday to Sunday in the colours of the rainbow, as there are '7' of each.
@rimaco1964 күн бұрын
It's so weird this dropped. I looked up information about synesthesia late last week. I'd come across the word and had never heard of this. I should have just been patient and waited for Joe.
@AbhishekShukla-dj9bl4 күн бұрын
Data leak .
@XxTesla21xX2 күн бұрын
How long ago would it not have been weird? If you had looked it up 2 weeks ago or a month ago would it still have been weird that this dropped yesterday?
@vivipyt3 күн бұрын
"If you are hungry, you just read dictionary" that was epic!😂 Wonderful video, been reading about synesthesia since many years and always in awe about such mystical yet beautiful complexities of our neurological system!
@NewMessage4 күн бұрын
I experienced it for a few months after a head injury as a child. I could smell that certain color of goldenrod that they used in some school handouts back in the 70's, and I still remember the smell vividly, even though I haven't smelled it in decades.
@bartolomeothesatyr3 күн бұрын
Was the smell recognizable, or totally unique to the color?
@NewMessage3 күн бұрын
@@bartolomeothesatyr It was unique, but had familiar elements. Mostly it smelled 'fuzzy'.. not like the feeling, but like... alcohol can smell 'fuzzy'... anesthetic-like, y'know? There was a hint of cinnamon, but not piquant, and overall very pleasant, but very 'in your face'. I couldn't ignore it. Unless I looked away.
@bartolomeothesatyr3 күн бұрын
@@NewMessage Thanks for answering! It's wild the effects crosstalk between neurons can have!
@captainveeee2 күн бұрын
I remember when I first heard about synesthesia in a children's book I read while growing up, and its so fascinating to always hear about it. I also think these kinds of books about fictional children talking about their different ways they viewed and experienced the world is always such an important thing.
@Beryllahawk4 күн бұрын
Fascinating to understand the difference here between a strong association and true synesthesia. I recall the first time I ever learned about the condition - in a creative writing class of all things because one of my classmates developed a character with synesthesia, and gave them a line about how purple sounds like whales. I read their piece and went "That is a fantastic sentence." And they grinned and then said "Synesthesia can be fun." So - of course I had to ask since I'd never even heard the word before, turned out they themselves did have synesthesia. So all their writings for the class involved that - and how folks react to "crazy people." I really hope that fellow kept writing, to be honest. For me I always had strong - and odd - associations, but nothing that would get called synesthesia. Just weird, haha! Such as "the number four is female because she's wearing a princess hat." (depending on how you write a 4, of course)
@_demosthenes3 күн бұрын
Look up Solomon Shereshevsky, he was a Russian mnemonist who had five-fold synesthesia, apparently he could recite an entire lecture by memory!
@LambdaCreates4 күн бұрын
I don't have synesthesia, but I associate multiplication problems with places. For example, 4 times 8 makes me think of a cozy cafe, 9 x 8 makes me think of a beach with some cliffs further in land and the water rushing in, 7 x 8 makes me think of a cannon firing somewhere on a big plainy field, 9 x 9 makes me think of another beach, just this time without cliffs and a first person perspective etc.
@raneanubis12 сағат бұрын
High chance that’s Synesthesia!
@Kyser094 күн бұрын
11:40 I chose the same names for the shapes, but I based them off how steeply the pitch changes as you say the word
@madhavikolte36512 күн бұрын
Same
@aliceinmansonland4484 күн бұрын
I always saw days of the week in Bar Graphs... The height of the bar would relate to how much I regularly enjoy that day! Constantly seeing patterns and graphs... THAT WAS MY CHILDHOOD!
@hunterG60k4 күн бұрын
Ooh, interesting! I see periods of time as shapes too. For me the week is represented by "bars" but they're much more fluid in shape than those on a graph. They also differ in size depending on how much I like the day!
@jvillan942 күн бұрын
Somewhere, Matteo is finally validated and Nick is rolling his eyes.
@Kodack-ki2im4 күн бұрын
I have sight sound synethesia and it's no big mystery to me whats happening in my head. Consider which sense can give you more information about something, looking at it, or listening to it. Looking at a car engine gives you one set of information, but listening to a running engine tells you a whole lot of other information including problem sounds. You have different parts of your brain that specialize in analyzing sound, or analyzing visual data, and they are very good at those things. But what if your brain could route sound through the visual cortex, or visual information through your auditory centers? You might be able to detect patterns and gain new insights into something that you would not if you simply looked at it without what you see, also resulting in you hearing something with your eyes. For me, as a musician, hearing things that I see makes me very aware of any rhythmic component in my field of vision. Things like flashing lights, or rotating wheels and gears, I can glance at them and tell if they are at a constant rate, speeding up, or slowing down, because I hear them like a drum beat. It's really easy to tell audibly if a beat is steady, faster, or slower. Your brain is very well adapted to processing sensual stimulus and synesthesia is just another way to throw more of your brain at a signal to understand it.
@TheJttv4 күн бұрын
There is exactly one song. Which I can see colors/shapes. Its the opening notes of Maggie Rogers "Alaska". But only that song.
@scorpionpizzaandcheeseextract4 күн бұрын
I also feel the color Black with light sparkles, like a glitter gold, from the opening to a KZbin track called Blind by Cemetery of Pets
@johnjoxx4 күн бұрын
Great artist!
@AlexCobb44Күн бұрын
The jump scare at the beginning spooked me. I audibly said "red" when he asked about 'A,' and it freaked me out.
@Etrancical3 күн бұрын
This episode made me realize that I actually have a lot of synesthesia. Seeing turning into feeling? Giving colors to smells? Even pain when going to the dentist registering as a sour taste simultaneously
@sirlight-ljij4 күн бұрын
I've learned about baba/keke experiment after playing "baba is you" and now associate the shapes accordingly
@anispinner3 күн бұрын
no, baba is you
@AkariTheImmortal3 күн бұрын
To me tastes have colors, which is why some foods just don't mix, just according to the color profile. It's sometimes very hard to describe, especially since I can taste colors that I can't even see. Colors I only know by taste. Like the color of saline solution. I can't really describe it. Or the color of the mixture of Banana and Coconut, the closest way, I could describe it would be that it tastes like rose gold liquid sunshine.
@tomsenior74054 күн бұрын
E is a fluid, a drink in a pint glass. A is red. The word Dog is a fluffy pom-pom. Friday is Blue. Bad spelling appears as green. Word Search Puzzles are a nightmare, they give me a flashing headache.
@rykehuss34354 күн бұрын
I read that as anesthesia, and was here for a good journey into anesthetics. I was still on board when he started with "what color is the letter A?", having seen some general anesthesia patients being put under
@guahlg28344 күн бұрын
Wow I'm early! Looks like yet another interesting intellectual video!
@albevanhanoy13 сағат бұрын
I am a huge fan of the work of Melissa McCracken. She is a painter with synesthesia who paints how she "sees" famous songs when listening to them. The paintings are hauntingly beautiful.
@VoidHalo3 күн бұрын
I had a weird synesthesia experience years ago where I was reading about alkanes in an organic chemistry book just for fun. I never learned any sort of chemistry at that point, so I was curious. As I read, the alkanes they described, methane, ethane, propane, butane and pentane each became their own distinct color. I don't mean the words were colorful. I mean the word itself, the symbology of that sound and combination of letters BECAME the colors. Methane was a sort of pastel green, ethane was a bright yellow, propane I can't recall, butane was a deep navy blue, and pentane was vibrant crimson red. Needless to say, it made the text a lot more interesting and I thoroughly digested that textbook in a month. The synesthesia or whatever it was only lasted the first time. But I had a voracious apetite for knowledge about organic chemistry after that. It was really cool. I never really worried about why it happened. Brains are complex. Things are bound to go haywire in them once in a while.
@0Shanna3 күн бұрын
Sound-touch here... With pain. Imagine a door slamming closed to be more painful than if that door actually slammed closed on a body part. Horror.
@arche2460Күн бұрын
I have mirror-touch and it's awful. I'll see someone get injured in a movie or YT video and feel it so viscerally it makes me nauseous... It's not JUST pain but pain is always the most prominent
@Kleineganz4 күн бұрын
Years ago I remember reading about synesthsia in one of Oliver Sachs' books (I forget which one, I've read several of his books). I believe the case study he talked about was one of the more unusal cases, of an adult acquiring it after a traumatic brain injury. I've always found the concept of blended senses fascinating.
@SpaceEngineerErich3 күн бұрын
Mine was a colored alphabet that was strung along the wall of my Kindergarten. A is red, but S is light blue. Until junior year of high school I thought everyone saw letters and numbers in their heads the way I did. Until a friend of mine told me he was writing a paper on synesthesia. After he explained to me what that was, I responded, "Um, my brain does that." Never really helped me in life. I can't memorize entire books like I have heard some people can. I do work with databases recording lots of part/serial numbers and I could memorize them for short periods of time. I rarely make an input error.
@fluffyou92762 күн бұрын
I use it to remember my pin codes for my credit card/debit card and smaller things like that.
@alexandersage62614 күн бұрын
I take issue with that. Fridays are a nice sunset yellow that smells like the heat of a summer afternoon. Also A's are purple, F's are pink, and U's are neon green
@Sevenfeet02 күн бұрын
My daughter who is now a college freshman has synesthesia, the graphemes kind (letters, words and numbers trigger colors). There can be downsides to this. Her grades have always been stellar but her standardized test scores, while very good never quite matched her grades. Her calculus professor figured out that she has dyscalculia which is a form of dyslexia where a person transposes digits in math formulas. Recently the drummer for U2 revealed he has an extreme case of it. We found out that dyscalculia is often associated with synesthesia. Nevertheless, she is working around this and loves math….enough that she now tells us she wants to be a math major.
@TheOriginalFaxon4 күн бұрын
The first time I ever took MDMA, it was mixed with a little 2c-b without my knowing. The combo resulted in me experiencing sound-color synesthesia for several hours. Basically I was seeing colors that had their own associated sounds, or i was hearing a particular color, I can't exactly say which it was as that night is a blur lol
@yomaddy4 күн бұрын
For me Sunday is red or orangish red. Monday is sky blue. Tuesday is bottle green. Wednesday is white. Thursday is leafy green. Friday is lavender. Saturday is black.
@davidroddini15124 күн бұрын
In answer to the thumbnail question, no Friday isn’t purple. That’s Sunday; Friday is green.
@charleswolfe88964 күн бұрын
For me Sunday is red and Wednesday is purple
@yomaddy4 күн бұрын
For me Sunday is red or orangish red. Monday is sky blue. Tuesday is bottle green. Wednesday is white. Thursday is leafy green. Friday is lavender. Saturday is black.
@Izzboy-d3t4 күн бұрын
SAME
@felipesato90454 күн бұрын
I think this depends a lot on what each day of the week, and what each color, means to each person
@momokhong314 күн бұрын
for me days are days
@Demetrius9000004 күн бұрын
So me seeing shapes when listening to music as a kid was some kind of synesthesia?
@GoldenEDM_20182 күн бұрын
Yess! I also have one, songs had always been colourful for me since childhood
@mikeroni4 күн бұрын
I have spatial-sequence synesthesia. So common sequences like days of the week or months of the year have a distinct shape in my head. I kind of see it like I moving along a board game as time passes.
@hunterG60k4 күн бұрын
I have this too! Didn't know the specific name for it though, cool.
@Quasar-v8h3 күн бұрын
Thats so weird i see it the same way too no way
@ValerieFulmer4 күн бұрын
Very interesting. I do not associate any letter with a color. I’m fascinated some people do.
@Sergio_Math3 күн бұрын
I have synesthesia. My experience of seeing sounds is very much akin to the way we hear sounds. At any point in time you can hear the birds, a truck passing by, the hum of a computer, the neighbor’s crappy music… but you can choose to ignore all of those and LISTEN to this video while still hearing all the other sounds. I can decide to ignore the swirls of color I hear, but it can be overpowering in some situations, like when hearing a sudden explosion. In that case, it really ruffles me for a few seconds. Other than that, it’s great. It helps me learn songs by ear because I can see the note I have to play when I hear it. You just match the colors!
@MelissaThompson4323 күн бұрын
My niece knew someone who saw music as color. She painted her sheet music because it made more sense than trying to read the little dots....
@kevinreardon25582 күн бұрын
Ah, this explains a lot. I'm able to sense body language and sound. So I'm able to "hear" what other people are doing based on their body language.
@Nethaura4 күн бұрын
I don't have synesthesia, but I agree that 'A' is red. Firstly, Apples are red (by default in our minds anyways), which is what most of us were taught to associate A with For me specifically, English was always Red in my elementary school. The workbook was red, and our notebooks were covered in red paper. And 'A' is often used as a shorthand symbol for English, so I also made the connection there
@10thdoctor154 күн бұрын
Apples are also green. Most school subjects use red books. For some reason, MFLs were yellow and Maths was grey. Never heard of English being A.
@cannonaire4 күн бұрын
@@10thdoctor15 A is absolutely orange for me. Pretty much every letter has a color! In preschool, A stood for 'Ape', which is a bit different from the usual. Might have been an orangutan. B is pink or red, and c is cyan. And so it goes...
@alexsiemers78984 күн бұрын
And also red is the first color we have in the visible spectrum, as is the letter A in the alphabet
@owenb69144 күн бұрын
1:07, that letter type made me read speech as speeeh because the c looks like an e
@Jaffjv4 күн бұрын
Sunday is the color of the sunset (reddish orange). Because “sun” is in the name and the week is setting
@MontgomeryWenis4 күн бұрын
My reasoning for choosing round for bouba and sharp for kiki is simply the shape of the words themselves. Kiki looks like the sharp, spiky shape. I could turn the word kiki into that shape. Same with bouba. It looks like a soft and fluffy cloud.
@vangu29184 күн бұрын
Right, bouba sounds round, and kiki sounds sharp.
@quiestinliteris3 күн бұрын
Except the experiment has been conducted with people who don't use any written language and were never shown the word in text, only asked to listen to it spoken. There does seem to be a limited set of innate human associations between sound and shape.
@dkf3434 күн бұрын
One aspect not covered here is the fact that synesthesia can be either explicit ( the kind discussed) and implicit, in which the person doesn’t directly experience the other sense, but processes sensory information using the hardware, as it were, normally devoted to just one. I have a number of different modes, mostly implicit, except for the ticker tape kind, which is fairly explicit for me. It’s always made spelling a lot easier for me than it seems to be for others.
@LangThoughts3 күн бұрын
When I hear a melody, my mind traces out a line, that can double back on itself, in my head.
@robjeh14 күн бұрын
The Bouba and Kiki thing might have to do with the shapes of the letters, Bouba letters being soft/round and Kiki hard lines?
@alericjohansen67753 күн бұрын
im not a synesthisic (spelling?), but when he asked about those, i thought kiki was the spiky one because of both the shape of the letters AND how it's spoken is very sharp.
@ahmarjatt22423 күн бұрын
I imagine animations visually while solving or comprehending mathematical problems or equations... And it is crystal clear and intentional and they are cartoonic style in their physics.
@hi-jr2pz4 күн бұрын
Best science channel
@rebeccamay64203 күн бұрын
This is a fascinating topic. I find it interesting that later in the video, it was suggested that understanding synesthesia could help us understand Autism. I recently discovered that I'm Autistic with ADHD, and watching this video brought back to mind some experiences that might be related to synesthesia: I've experienced spinal sensations when listening to certain kinds of music, especially classical piano. There are times when I can feel the color of someone's personality. The light brown appearance of dried hydrangea flowers triggers a flavor. It took me a while to connect what food my mind was "tasting" -- Grape Nuts Flakes cereal. 😅
@josholt614 күн бұрын
I have aphantasia. So even the thought of seeing something that isn't there is weird, and the color of letters is just whatever keyboard that is front of me, mostly black or white.
@blackmagician76454 күн бұрын
0:21 🤔Interesting. With me. B's are green and D's are blue. But A's are red and C's are yellow like everyone elses perspective by the chart.
@annekeener41193 күн бұрын
It’s also interesting how much childhood stimuli affect synesthesia. Aside from alphabet magnets affecting the colors letters appear as, the smells people with synesthesia associate with certain colors lines up pretty well with Crayola’s scented marker line. So this childhood association remains in adulthood in people with synesthesia.
@vampsprite6913 сағат бұрын
genuinely for most of my life i thought everyone else also felt physical sensations when hearing noises, musical or not. i love songs that feel like soft grasses brushing by my fingers and songs that feel liike broken glass in my mouth, every music genre is such an experience its awesome. also didnt know ihad autism for a while tho and im an artist so i probably should have asked someone else if they could relate sooner LOL. was a real relief to find out that auditory-tadtile synesthesia was a thing and im not jus crazy
@CharlieDoubleWhiskey11 сағат бұрын
I've experienced synesthesia while under the influence of psilocybin mushrooms. I could see the colours of the sounds of birds' songs. It was beautiful.
@danielsac63163 күн бұрын
I'm autistic and recently discovered that other people don't see personalities in numbers and letters. I always associated personalities based on graphemes' faces, but other people don't even see faces in graphemes! Apparently, that's grapheme personification synaesthesia. 😅 By the way, both autism and synaesthesia are linked to reduced synaptic pruning in neurodevelopment. Synaesthesia is more prevalent in autists than in the general population.
@jennim7Күн бұрын
You just dropped my jaw 9:10 . I never knew this was a type of synesthesia, and I literally just blurted out "oh s**t!" When hearing this. I just thought it was how my brain worked, kinda normal.
@alexv33574 күн бұрын
I've always thought sounds have both colours and textures. For example, the Be Smart intro music is definitely rainforest green, with a bit of silver, a texture like sanded but unpolished wood.
@KateSuhrgirlPlays2 күн бұрын
I wish I could taste colors. That'd be cool.
@genkisudo3 күн бұрын
Does psychedelics give you synesthesia? I once was able to see the waves in music and it matches what you’re describing
@marselyte3 күн бұрын
They do
@tilakvenugopal40442 күн бұрын
Most people learned the letter A representing an apple which are red
@Mezo44 күн бұрын
Friday is either brown or yellow, letter A is red and D is green B blue C is cyan S is definitely red U is navy blue W is cyan and this is my personal opinion so no hate 😊
@DatNapk1n472 күн бұрын
4:09 I am now 20 and have very vivid and conscious memories (which my parents have corroborated not to be fabricated) from back when I was learning to walk. I did not have any sort of synesthesia then and I certainly do not have any now. I do remember seeing in more detail, having an almost perfect recollection and a way quicker and deeper ability to analyse what I was sensing (which I miss), but my fundamental sensory experience was not all that different.
@wanderingsilverrose4 күн бұрын
I think music is just tied to everything for me. It's the strongest constant in my entire life. I see it, I feel it, I taste it, I smell it. Drums in particular are like a lullaby, because I fell asleep to crashing bowling balls as an infant when my parents would go bowling. And also, they both loved music. Even just words alone are connected in fun ways, too.
@TatsumiOga6823 күн бұрын
Is perfect pitch/ absolute pitch a form of synesthesia?
@Random_Nobody_Official4 күн бұрын
Only 1 in 25 people? I thought it would be alot more common than that for some reason...
@feldinho4 күн бұрын
I felt some forms of synesthesia while REDACTED. One of the weirdest was feeling the texture of music in my skin while wearing headphones.
@chrishorsfield62684 күн бұрын
1:36 ok. I didn’t “see” the A as red, but it was the first color to come to mind.
@mr.e75413 күн бұрын
Well he kind of said it has to do with our subconscious is memory of a children's toy. Those letters. Plus a is the first of the alphabet and red is the first color we think of in a rainbow
@rokess50533 күн бұрын
Probably because of his explanation about the fridge letters.
@leeeorama3 күн бұрын
On the subject of post adolescents not being able to develop synesthesia, I've experienced some music, namely stuff by Autechre, which evokes colors to me, and that other people experience similar things with Autechre as well.
@AryadiSubagio4 күн бұрын
There are people who literally see subtitles as others speak? That's cool! Does it work in other languages or just the ones they know?
@trinodot811221 сағат бұрын
I dont experience synesthesia while sober, but I have experienced it on psychedelics where bright lights have an auditory whirring and buzzing to them.
@Wilson-obrien4 күн бұрын
I used to get words confused like pine cone = nevermind. I don’t know why. I remember having trouble telling the difference between “nope” and “doughnut”
@Random_Nobody_Official4 күн бұрын
@@Wilson-obrien I'm so confused, those words are entirely unrelated, would you like, accidentally say one instead of saying the other?
@Wilson-obrien4 күн бұрын
@@Random_Nobody_Official yeah, but not anymore
@rebeccamay64203 күн бұрын
Language processing glitches may be related to neurodivergence, such as ADHD, Autism, Dyslexia, etc. Myself, I mix up "purple" and "orange," "ladybug" and "butterfly." I know I clearly recognize what it is that I'm looking at, but my brain sends the wrong word to my mouth.
@darcieclements48803 күн бұрын
That can happening some types of dyslexia. I don't have synesthesia, but I do have a few weird closely associated opposite terms that the dyslexia just got really messed up on. I think the most profound is the letter f and the number 5. Like when you start to write them they're almost the same, except this sucker persists on keyboards too😂 My dad has a similar super weird one where he gets the pronouns of animals reversed consistently. No problem with human pronouns, just pets. Like for both of us we will sit there and be like what did I just do / say. Now I will say I do think I have finally beaten the F5 thing, but I just know it's lurking there waiting to appear in a document someday...
@LothariesКүн бұрын
@@darcieclements4880 I mess 5 and F up too! But for me it's when talking actually. I also often read numbers out loud completely different than what I'm looking at and thinking of
@isalesiiibarrynicholasd.1191Күн бұрын
I can imagine the shape of the voice, by just hearing it, in my head I don't visually see it, its just how i sense, these kind of voice is thin or thick, pointed or grainy with some sort of its own unique shape or texture.
@magneticsnail72182 күн бұрын
All movement makes noise for me, even when it's silent movement (like blinks, smiles, someone far away walking). Most of the time, I experience it as music, like repeating notes or tunes.
@gearslingger4 күн бұрын
I had the amazing experience of seeing sound.
@Bern_il_Cinq4 күн бұрын
Idk why I'm subscribed to this channel when I have no record of ever having watched any of its videos...
@cjsun78713 күн бұрын
I immediately thought of these fridge letters!
@kingcong57543 күн бұрын
If we could forget it, i imagine we can learn it again?
@gilliganmcneuter45504 күн бұрын
I wonder if synesthesia aids memorization Also, I know I don't taste words or smell sounds However, when I learned my letters and numbers, they all had genders, and I still know what they are for the most part Idk if that's like synesthesia or just bizzare
@catherinethiemann97604 күн бұрын
Yes, synesthesia aids memorization. When I think of the first 45 digits of pi, I think of the color patterns. That's the only way it could have stuck in my head for 50 years.
@strawberryseed1886Күн бұрын
My ticker tape synesthesia definitely helps memorization.
@benjaminbeard37363 күн бұрын
I get numbers in the form of shapes and/or textures. It only goes up through 100 or so , and then only certain numbers get a shape. Usually round or important numbers. I've had full-blown audio/visual synesthesia a few times while on "a heroic dose" of the fun mushrooms.
@firstcynic924 күн бұрын
0:11. That letter A is black. The color of a letter depends on the color selected in the word processing program or the ink used in printing. Now, if you want to discuss qualia, I'd like that. We both look at a color, we agree that it is the same color & light frequency, but how do we know that what I'm seeing is the same as what you're seeing?
@MelissaThompson4323 күн бұрын
I had an illness at about 2 1/2; it caused amnesia, and I had to relearn how to do the things a two year old can do. Later I read in an article that if you have brain damage between the ages of 2 and 3, you probably end up with more synapses than you would otherwise, because there are new synapses formed when the originals aren't working, but then the originals recover due to brain plasticity at that age. I have always had a sense of connections between unrelated things, but not to the degree that I would call myself a synesthete.
@everestjarvik55023 күн бұрын
I don’t know if I actually have grapheme color synesthesia- I probably don’t but I do associate the first 7 letters of the alphabet with colors. Why the first 7? I guess because I’m a musician and so I’ve spent a lot more time forming connections around the letters used as note names. A= light red B= blue C= yellow D= dark red E= green F= purple G= orange
@RebeccaStock-r3b3 күн бұрын
I think we need to look at the connection between taste and smell. Perhaps that will help understanding mixed senses?
@bobrong96454 күн бұрын
I don't know if it's true, and I definitely don't recommend you take illegal drugs, but it seems people can acquire temporary synaesthesia with LSD. Also, what about VR video games? Some titles claim they create a sense of synaesthesia, and they certainly are experiences (Rez Infinite, Tetris Effect...)
@notyou11782 күн бұрын
Wow the first question I got was instantly got right without even realizing what this video was about! I immediately thought red for “A”
@TheFAKATA4 күн бұрын
Love these video's!!!
@DJMarkCorneliusThaDon4 күн бұрын
Glad they changed the thumbnail.
@zero213kt4 күн бұрын
Monday is always blue. Tuesday is grey and Wednesday, too.
@bartolomeothesatyr3 күн бұрын
Thursdays, I don't care about you! It's Friday I'm in love....
@OMJ_the_Show2 күн бұрын
😅
@carlsoll2 күн бұрын
Pretend there all Thursdays, than Friday just shows up
@joannelam57783 күн бұрын
Yup. That's me.
@TheFalconerNZ4 күн бұрын
I first heard about Synesthesia from the show 'Heroes' (2006) & instantly wished I had it as I have a bad memory & could see the benefits of dual input for learning (hearing what I read or seeing what I heard). However I also saw the down side as in the possibility Van Gogh had it & it drove his depression due to his inability to handle it & the refusal of those around him to understand why/how he reacted to some stimulus. they way he did. It also reminded me of a conversation I had with a friend about how we see colours, I argued that if (in my mind) I had seen blue as red but had been told my whole life that the red I saw was called blue so called it blue, how would anyone know I didn't see what they saw or they may see blue as green.
@DazLeOneink4 күн бұрын
11:03 the letter K has a sharper hit to it. So the spiky image fits
@ncammann4 күн бұрын
I have sound/Sight synesthesia. Sounds create a kaleidoscope of shapes and colours in my head. The purer the sound, the simpler the colour and pattern, and the easier it is to describe. Conversations can be so many shapes and colours, so fast, it would be impossible to describe. If I get someone somewhere quiet and hear them talk softly, I can tell the colour of their voice and the shapes it makes in my head. Better still if I can close my eyes. My Spaniel barking is stars - Green centre with a purple outline - growing from bottom right to top left, like a firework. At night hearing the radiator cooling down, the pops are pink dots with hazy yellow edges that pop and fade to disappear. My Wife's voice is mostly yellowish with green tinges.
@DamagedButManaging4 күн бұрын
Numbers have colors, textures, and densities. And music most definitely has textures and colors
@Astrialx3 күн бұрын
My previous lover could taste colors. She felt embarrassed by it. I have no idea why- I thought it was amazing.
@Random_Nobody_Official4 күн бұрын
Yes, Friday is purple. the days of the week are the colors of the rainbow, in order, starting with sunday.
@LexieBlackledge2 күн бұрын
NO, THE ALPHABET GOES: A: Blue B: Black C: Yellow D: Red E: Light blue F: Green G: Orange H: Dark orange/red orange I: Black J: Black K: Purple L: Forrest green M: Yellow N: Red O: White P: Red Q: Purple R: Orange S: White T: Dark green U: magenta V: green W: yellow X: orange Y: magenta Z: green this is already giving my synthetic/dyslexic ass a headache THE SYNETHESIA IS SUPPOSED TO COUNTER ACT THE DYSLEXIA NOT FIGHT IT!
@LexieBlackledge2 күн бұрын
ALSO FRIDAY IS GREEN
@adamcarrell4 күн бұрын
1 = male 2 = female 3 = male 4 = male 5 = male 6 = male 7 = female 8 = male 9 = female 0 = male I never understood why my brain genders numbers, but I assume it's because Sesame Street or some other show I saw as a kid had number puppets with male and female voices.
@ooqui4 күн бұрын
Synethesia is something you can (and should) learn. For example, I've trained myself to see sound like a bat (active echolocation, Daniel Kish style) by linking my sense of sound to my sight. I can actually see with my ears, but not the same images are being created in my brain as in sight. Furthermore, I've learned to combine dissimilar colors of my left eye with those of my right eye, basically making me a functional hexachromat with the right technology. While for you the concept of a magenta-yellow, blue-cyan, black-white, lime-purple or a red-green might sound weird, for me these are colors I see almost daily. I've seen about 16 million times more colors than the average human. There are about 16 million trichromatic colors in a digital context, but there are 280 TRILLION hexachromatic colors. Generally, I've got tetrachromacy induced via glasses with a special lens pair that I've designed, with which I can see about 256 times the colors than most people, with a 4-dimensional color space. These are all synesthesias that I've developed later in life (16yo+). I stand firmly that everyone can learn this, too. But just like in language learning as an adult it might take more effort than when you were a child.