Synesthesia in science and technology: more than making the unseen visible

KS Suslick - Current opinion in chemical biology, 2012 - Elsevier
Current opinion in chemical biology, 2012Elsevier
Much of our science and technology relies on the visualization of complex data, and
chemical biology, more than most fields, often deals with complex datasets. There are,
however, other ways of making information available to our senses beyond the visual. Rare
individuals naturally have sensory crossover, whose synesthesia permits them, for example,
to see colors or shapes when hearing sounds or to sense a specific taste with a specific
word. Many scientists, technologists and inventors, however, make a conscious attempt to …
Much of our science and technology relies on the visualization of complex data, and chemical biology, more than most fields, often deals with complex datasets. There are, however, other ways of making information available to our senses beyond the visual. Rare individuals naturally have sensory crossover, whose synesthesia permits them, for example, to see colors or shapes when hearing sounds or to sense a specific taste with a specific word. Many scientists, technologists and inventors, however, make a conscious attempt to convert one type of sensory-like input to a different sensory output. A laser light show, for example, converts sound to sight; infrared imaging converts heat to sight. Two recent examples of such intentional synesthesia are discussed in this context: sight-tasting and smell-seeing.
Elsevier
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