Synaesthesia: when senses merge
Synaesthesia: 鈥楳y sister tastes of blackcurrant yoghurt, my grandmother of thick, condensed milk鈥. We meet the man who tastes every sound he hears.
Neurologist. Dr Guy Leschziner, explores the extraordinary sensory experiences of individuals with synaesthesia - a mash-up of senses where one sense automatically triggers another. Some synaesthetes hear colours, others feel sound.
We meet James who perceives the world differently from most people, due to his brain鈥檚 unusual wiring. Whenever he hears a word he immediately gets a taste and texture in his mouth. As a child, he鈥檇 go by train to school with his mum, reading out loud the stations they passed through. His favourite was Tottenham Court Road because the word sounds taste of sausage, crispy fried egg and toast.
Whilst James tastes words, 23 year-old synaesthete Valeria sees colours and feels textures when she hears music. She assumes everyone has that sensory experience until, at aged 14, she sees her dad鈥檚 astonished reaction! For Valeria, some music is so utterly exquisite it causes her intense, physical pain.
Such variations in perception can also affect our internal world as Sheri, a painter from Canada, illustrates. After a stroke in her twenties she can no longer picture images in her mind. The condition, aphantasia (meaning 鈥榳ithout a mind鈥檚 eye鈥) is so devastating Sheri calls it 鈥渋nternal blindness鈥.
Our understanding of reality comes from how we perceive the world around us. But as we discover in this programme and throughout this series, each of us experiences a unique reality constructed by our brain and our sensory system. Leading us to question what is real and what is an illusion.
Presenter: Dr Guy Leschziner
Producer: Sally Abrahams
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Broadcast
- Wed 13 Jan 2021 21:00麻豆社 Radio 4