El profesorado andaluz consolida sus complementos autonómicos

– El profesorado andaluz consolida sus complementos autonómicos

Las universidades y los sindicatos se comprometen a actualizar el acuerdo en 2008

Los representantes de las universidades andaluzas, de las centrales sindicales mayoritarias y de la Consejería de Innovación, Ciencia y Empresa se reunieron ayer en la secretaría de Universidades de la Junta para fijar los complementos autonómicos del profesorado. Así quedó consolidada la retribución de los complementos autonómicos actuales, sin perjuicio de su eventual incremento por evaluaciones sucesivas, y se llegó al compromiso de renovar en 2008 este acuerdo.
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Donde emana la vida

– Donde emana la vida.

Málaga es de las primeras en el inventario de fuentes y manantiales, elaborado por la Junta de Andalucía, con medio centenar de puntos de interés en los que nace el agua.

HAY imágenes en las que pasan los minutos y el espectador sigue enganchado. En la naturaleza, estas cosas ocurren con la lluvia, aunque se vean caer las gotas miles de veces nunca deja de ser un espectáculo; con el fuego (pese a que sea generalmente una desgracia) y con los nacimientos de fuentes, manantiales y ríos. Ese fluir del agua, cíclica, a borbotones, a caños, en sifón o a través de un salto es una postal que los enamorados del medio ambiente buscan afanosamente en las sierras de la provincia.

Y Málaga es precisamente una privilegiada en Andalucía, ya que se alza con 50 puntos de gran interés, donde emana el agua al igual que Granada y Jaén. Éste es sólo el preámbulo del primer inventario que la Consejería de Medio Ambiente está elaborando en toda la Comunidad para conocer las fuentes y manantiales, y en el que Málaga obtiene una puntuación privilegiada.

La consejera de Medio Ambiente, Fuensanta Coves, presentó ayer el proyecto de investigación y divulgación para catalogar e inventariar los manantiales de agua que existen en Andalucía, una iniciativa que llevarán a cabo la Agencia Andaluza del Agua en colaboración con la Universidad de Granada y el Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME). Por ahora, un primer inventario ha identificado un total de 338 puntos de especial importancia en el conjunto del territorio andaluz, de los que 117 fuentes y manantiales tienen una valoración media y 114, alta. De entre ellos, Málaga cuenta con cincuenta. Pero los de muy alto valor en la provincia son nueve puntos, muchos de ellos tan populares como el manantial de la Cueva del Gato o el balneario de Carratraca; el nacimiento del río Genal, en Igualeja; el manantial de los Cien Caños, en Villanueva del Trabuco; la laguna de Fuente de Piedra; el manantial de Zarzalones, en Yunquera; el de los Cascajales, en Benaoján; o el de la Fajara, en Canillas de Aceituno.

Todos ellos tienen su encanto, pero no deja de ser espectacular el nacimiento del río Genal. Un río que baña un valle sin igual, y que fluye en pequeñas cascadas que rompen con fuerza, y que emanan de una enorme y húmeda gruta, desde donde surge un cauce eminentemente mediterráneo, que tiene 53 kilómetros de recorrido.

Balneario

El conocido balneario de Carratraca también tiene sus encantos. Se dicen que sus aguas sulfurosas hicieron las delicias del siempre incomprendido escritor inglés Lord Byron, del poeta Rainer María Rilke o donde Vicente Aleixandre se sumergió para curarse de su nefritis tuberculosa. También parece que disfrutó el triste de Fernando VII, cuyo retrato está en una de las estancias del hotel, que ha reformado la cadena Ritz-Carlton con un gusto exquisito recreando el clasicismo de mediados del siglo XIX, pero con guiños al interiorismo más actual. Tampoco se debe quedar atrás la Cueva del Gato, en Benaoján, donde el agua nace de una impresionante gruta con uno de los sistemas espeleológicos más importantes de Andalucía.

Y entre otras, la enigmática fuente de los Cien Caños, en Villanueva del Trabuco, por donde fluye el río Guadalhorce. Todas ellas son fuentes desde donde emana el agua que, en muchos casos, recorre la provincia en cursos fluviales regando campos y posibilitando el desarrollo de la flora y la fauna y abasteciendo a ciudades. En definitiva, generando vida.
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La prensa médica premia el Libro Blanco de Medicina como una de las mejores ideas de la sanidad del año 2007

Diario Médico, la publicación diaria del grupo Unidad Editorial dedicada al mundo de la medicina profesional, ha elegido el Libro Blanco de Medicina como una de las mejores ideas de la sanidad del año 2007, en un número especial que recoge un balance de las iniciativas más brillantes del último año en las distintas vertientes de la sanidad, la profesión médica, la ética, la ciencia, la gestión y la solidaridad.

La iniciativa impulsada y desarrollada por la Conferencia de Decanos de las facultades de Medicina españolas ha sido premiada por el diario en la categoría de “política profesional”, destacando su papel decisivo como herramienta básica para la adaptación de los futuros planes de estudio de Medicina.

El Libro Blanco de Medicina es una guía elaborada con el consenso de todos los decanos de las facultades de Medicina españolas, en la que se establecen las pautas propuestas por los docentes para la adaptación de la titulación a las directrices del Espacio Europeo de Educación Superior (EEES).
El documento, elaborado en el marco de un proyecto supervisado y financiado por la Agencia Nacional de Evaluación de la Calidad y Acreditación (ANECA), plantea un concepto formativo basado en competencias, donde la enseñanza en el aula deja de tener un papel primordial, para otorgar mayor protagonismo a la práctica clínica, la atención al paciente, las habilidades técnicas y de comunicación, el uso y aplicación de las nuevas tecnologías y la introducción a la investigación médica, de acuerdo con los planteamientos establecidos en el marco del EEES.

Las pautas establecidas en el Libro Blanco de Medicina responden, además, a la filosofía de la Ley de Ordenación de las Profesiones Sanitarias (LOPS) que regula, entre otros aspectos, el acceso a la formación especializada en Medicina, planteando un cambio fundamental en la concepción del examen MIR. La LOPS establece que, además de los conocimientos del futuro médico, se habrán de evaluar sus capacidades de comunicación con el enfermo, además de su habilidad y competencia clínica. Las indicaciones recogidas en el Libro Blanco de Medicina sientan las bases para una reforma que cambie la forma de enseñar la Medicina en las facultades, permitiendo ya desde el pregrado la capacitación clínica de los futuros médicos.

………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Referencia
Prof. José María Peinado Herreros.
Presidente de la Conferencia Nacional de Decanos de Medicina
Decano de la facultad de Medicina. Universidad de Granada
Tel. 958 243 503. Correo e. decamed@ugr.es


1 person out of every 1,000 has synaesthesia, in which an individual can smell a sound

– 1 person out of every 1,000 has synaesthesia, in which an individual can smell a sound.

Surprising as it may seem, there are people who can smell sounds, see smells or hear colours. Actually, all of as, at some point in our lives, have had this skill (some authors affirm that it is common in newborns). This phenomenon, called synaesthesia – from the Greek syn (with) and aisthesis (sensation) – consists of the pairing of two bodily senses by which the perception of a determined stimulus activates a different subjective perception with no external stimulus (in science, the evoker stimulus is called inducer and the additional experience concurrent).

In the department of Experimental Psychology and Physiology at the University of Granada, a research group is carrying out pioneer work in Spain on the systematic study of synaesthesia and its relation with perception and emotions. Professor Juan Lupiáñez Castillo and Alicia Callejas Sevilla have devoted many years to the study of this unknown but interesting phenomenon, which affects approximately one person out of every thousand. Many of these people do not even know that they are synaesthetes, as they think they perceive the world normally.

Pioneers

Callejas doctoral thesis is one of the most detailed studies on this phenomenon at an international level, and it is probably the first doctoral thesis on this topic in Europe. Her study covers the various forms of synaesthesia focussing on the most common one: the grapheme-colour type (for people with this form of synaesthesia, letters, words and numbers evoke colours in an automatic and involuntary way).

One of the distinctive characteristics of this form of synaesthesia is the fact that people are certain about their perceptions: they feel that their way of experiencing the world is correct, and they become disappointed when they realize there is something that is not quite right. Therefore, when a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake. The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct, affirms Callejas. Consequently, finding the word table written in red might be unpleasant whereas seeing it in blue might be agreeable. This emotional reaction associated with how synaesthetes perceive consistent or inconsistent stimuli is an extremely interesting subject and has been studied for the first time in this doctoral thesis.

Irrepressible reactions

Some of Callejas conclusions show that these emotional reactions occur automatically and can not be ignored. Moreover, they can affect the synaesthete to the point of slanting his or her preferences when faced with certain stimuli which correspond to his or her inner experiences. Even more important is the fact that these emotions can transform how they perceive events associated with these experiences. These events may have no emotional meaning initially but they can become more or less pleasant if they take place at the same time the synaesthete finds a word in the correct or incorrect colour.

Then, there are people for whom time units evoke colours – explains the researcher. It is also common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, sounds in general or music notes (people who can see music, for instance). There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, some link flavours to touch sensations, etc.

An permanent vision

These researchers from Granada underline that synaesthetes always experience the same vision, synaesthesia is permanent (a given stimulus always evokes the same colour for one person) and idiosyncratic (it is different for each person). Therefore, if for a synaesthete the word dog is red, every time he or she sees it, it will be perceived as red.

Even though synaesthesia has been known for a long time, its scientific study is relatively recent. Writings such as the Castel one, in which reference is made to previous studies about a synaesthesia case in a blind person, are found in the 18th century. The evolution of the study of this phenomenon has been spectacular – the number of researchers working on this topic is constantly increasing, as will be evident in the Conference which will take place in Granada – and, as the phase of proving that this phenomenon exists has been overcome, explains Alicia Callejas, we are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies. The results of her research have been published in the following prestigious scientific journals, among others: Cortex, Experimental Brain Research and Consciousness and Cognition.

Nowadays, the research field goes from grapheme-colour synaesthesia to other forms never studied before: flavours evoked by music or words (lexical-gustatory synaesthesia), space structures linked to time units, colours and music, etc.

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Some People Can Hear A Color Or Smell A Sound

– Some People Can Hear A Color Or Smell A Sound.

Surprising as it may seem, there are people who can smell sounds, see smells or hear colors. Actually, all of as, at some point in our lives, have had this skill (some authors affirm that it is common in newborns). This phenomenon, called synaesthesia – from the Greek syn (with) and aisthesis (sensation) – consists of the pairing of two bodily senses by which the perception of a determined stimulus activates a different subjective perception with no external stimulus (in science, the evoker stimulus is called inducer and the additional experience concurrent).

In the department of Experimental Psychology and Physiology at the University of Granada, a research group is carrying out pioneer work in Spain on the systematic study of synaesthesia and its relation with perception and emotions. Professor Juan Lupiáñez Castillo and Alicia Callejas Sevilla have devoted many years to the study of this unknown but interesting phenomenon, which affects approximately one person out of every thousand. Many of these people do not even know that they are synaesthetes, as they think they perceive the world normally.

Pioneers

Callejas doctoral thesis is one of the most detailed studies on this phenomenon at an international level, and it is probably the first doctoral thesis on this topic in Europe. Her study covers the various forms of synaesthesia focusing on the most common one: the grapheme-color type (for people with this form of synaesthesia, letters, words and numbers evoke colors in an automatic and involuntary way).

One of the distinctive characteristics of this form of synaesthesia is the fact that people are certain about their perceptions: they feel that their way of experiencing the world is correct, and they become disappointed when they realize there is something that is not quite right. Therefore, when a person with grapheme-color synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a color other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake. The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct, affirms Callejas. Consequently, finding the word table written in red might be unpleasant whereas seeing it in blue might be agreeable. This emotional reaction associated with how synaesthetes perceive consistent or inconsistent stimuli is an extremely interesting subject and has been studied for the first time in this doctoral thesis.

Irrepressible reactions

Some of Callejas conclusions show that these emotional reactions occur automatically and can not be ignored. Moreover, they can affect the synaesthete to the point of slanting his or her preferences when faced with certain stimuli which correspond to his or her inner experiences. Even more important is the fact that these emotions can transform how they perceive events associated with these experiences. These events may have no emotional meaning initially but they can become more or less pleasant if they take place at the same time the synaesthete finds a word in the correct or incorrect color.

Then, there are people for whom time units evoke colors – explains the researcher. It is also common for a synaesthete to see colors when listening to words, sounds in general or music notes (people who can see music, for instance). There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colors in flavors, others perceive flavors or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, some link flavors to touch sensations, etc.

An permanent vision

These researchers from Granada underline that synaesthetes always experience the same vision, synaesthesia is permanent (a given stimulus always evokes the same color for one person) and idiosyncratic (it is different for each person). Therefore, if for a synaesthete the word dog is red, every time he or she sees it, it will be perceived as red.

Even though synaesthesia has been known for a long time, its scientific study is relatively recent. Writings such as the Castel one, in which reference is made to previous studies about a synaesthesia case in a blind person, are found in the 18th century. The evolution of the study of this phenomenon has been spectacular – the number of researchers working on this topic is constantly increasing, as will be evident in the Conference which will take place in Granada – and, as the phase of proving that this phenomenon exists has been overcome, explains Alicia Callejas, we are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies. The results of her research have been published in the following prestigious scientific journals, among others: Cortex, Experimental Brain Research and Consciousness and Cognition.

Nowadays, the research field goes from grapheme-color synaesthesia to other forms never studied before: flavors evoked by music or words (lexical-gustatory synaesthesia), space structures linked to time units, colors and music, etc.
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One Human Can Smell Sound out of Every One Thousand, New Study Suggests

– One Human Can Smell Sound out of Every One Thousand, New Study Suggests.

The research field has grown from grapheme-color. Synaesthesia to include other forms of Synaesthesia in which flavors are evoked by music or words (lexical-gustatory Synaesthesia), space structures by time units, colors by music, etc. Experts on Experimental Psychology from the University of Granada are studying this phenomenon. The results of this research have been published by the following scientific journals, among others: Cortex, Experimental Brain Research and Consciousness and Cognition.

Surprising as it may seem, there are people who can smell sounds, see smells or hear colors. Actually, all of as, at some point in our lives, have had this skill (some authors affirm that it is common in newborns). This phenomenon, called “Synaesthesia” – from the Greek “syn” (with) and “aisthesis” (sensation) – consists of the pairing of two bodily senses by which the perception of a determined stimulus activates a different subjective perception with no external stimulus (in science, the evoker stimulus is called inducer and the additional experience concurrent).

In the department of Experimental Psychology and Physiology at the University of Granada, a research group is carrying out pioneer work in Spain on the systematic study of Synaesthesia and its relation with perception and emotions. Professor Juan Lupiáñez Castillo and Alicia Callejas Sevilla have devoted many years to the study of this unknown but interesting phenomenon, which affects approximately one person out of every thousand. Many of these people do not even know that they are synaesthetes, as they think they perceive the world normally.

Pioneers

Callejas’ doctoral thesis is one of the most detailed studies on this phenomenon at an international level, and it is probably the first doctoral thesis on this topic in Europe. Her study covers the various forms of Synaesthesia focussing on the most common one: the grapheme-color type (for people with this form of Synaesthesia, letters, words and numbers evoke colors in an automatic and involuntary way).

One of the distinctive characteristics of this form of Synaesthesia is the fact that people are certain about their perceptions: they feel that their way of experiencing the world is correct, and they become disappointed when they realize there is something that is not quite right. ‘Therefore, when a person with grapheme-color Synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a color other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake. The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct,’ affirms Callejas. Consequently, finding the word table written in red might be unpleasant whereas seeing it in blue might be agreeable. This emotional reaction associated with how synaesthetes perceive consistent or inconsistent stimuli is an extremely interesting subject and has been studied for the first time in this doctoral thesis.

Irrepressible reactions

Some of Callejas’ conclusions show that these emotional reactions occur automatically and can not be ignored. Moreover, they can affect the synaesthete to the point of slanting his or her preferences when faced with certain stimuli which correspond to his or her inner experiences. Even more important is the fact that these emotions can transform how they perceive events associated with these experiences. These events may have no emotional meaning initially but they can become more or less pleasant if they take place at the same time the synaesthete finds a word in the correct or incorrect color.

‘Then, there are people for whom time units evoke colors – explains the researcher. It is also common for a synaesthete to see colors when listening to words, sounds in general or music notes (people who can see music, for instance). There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colors in flavors, others perceive flavors or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, some link flavors to touch sensations, etc.’

Permanent vision

These researchers from Granada underline that synaesthetes always experience the same vision, Synaesthesia is permanent (a given stimulus always evokes the same color for one person) and idiosyncratic (it is different for each person). Therefore, if for a synaesthete the word dog is red, every time he or she sees it, it will be perceived as red.

Even though Synaesthesia has been known for a long time, its scientific study is relatively recent. Writings such as the Castel one, in which reference is made to previous studies about a Synaesthesia case in a blind person are found in the 18th century. The evolution of the study of this phenomenon has been spectacular – the number of researchers working on this topic is constantly increasing, as will be evident in the Conference which will take place in Granada – and, as the phase of proving that this phenomenon exists has been overcome, explains Alicia Callejas, ‘we are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies.’ The results of her research have been published in the following prestigious scientific journals, among others: Cortex, Experimental Brain Research and Consciousness and Cognition.

Nowadays, the research field goes from grapheme-color Synaesthesia to other forms never studied before: flavors evoked by music or words (lexical-gustatory Synaesthesia), space structures linked to time units, colors and music, etc.

Descargar


1 person out of every 1,000 has synaesthesia, in which an individual can smell a sound

– 1 person out of every 1,000 has synaesthesia, in which an individual can smell a sound.

The research field has grown from grapheme-colour synaesthesia to include other forms of synaesthesia in which flavours are evoked by music or words (lexical-gustatory synaesthesia), space structures by time units, colours by music, etc. Experts on Experimental Psychology from the University of Granada are studying this phenomenon. The results of this research have been published by the following scientific journals, among others: Cortex, Experimental Brain Research and Consciousness and Cognition.

Surprising as it may seem, there are people who can smell sounds, see smells or hear colours. Actually, all of as, at some point in our lives, have had this skill (some authors affirm that it is common in newborns). This phenomenon, called “synaesthesia” – from the Greek “syn” (with) and “aisthesis” (sensation) – consists of the pairing of two bodily senses by which the perception of a determined stimulus activates a different subjective perception with no external stimulus (in science, the evoker stimulus is called inducer and the additional experience concurrent).

In the department of Experimental Psychology and Physiology at the University of Granada, a research group is carrying out pioneer work in Spain on the systematic study of synaesthesia and its relation with perception and emotions. Professor Juan Lupiáñez Castillo and Alicia Callejas Sevilla have devoted many years to the study of this unknown but interesting phenomenon, which affects approximately one person out of every thousand. Many of these people do not even know that they are synaesthetes, as they think they perceive the world normally.

Pioneers

Callejas’ doctoral thesis is one of the most detailed studies on this phenomenon at an international level, and it is probably the first doctoral thesis on this topic in Europe. Her study covers the various forms of synaesthesia focussing on the most common one: the grapheme-colour type (for people with this form of synaesthesia, letters, words and numbers evoke colours in an automatic and involuntary way).

One of the distinctive characteristics of this form of synaesthesia is the fact that people are certain about their perceptions: they feel that their way of experiencing the world is correct, and they become disappointed when they realize there is something that is not quite right. ‘Therefore, when a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake. The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct,’ affirms Callejas. Consequently, finding the word table written in red might be unpleasant whereas seeing it in blue might be agreeable. This emotional reaction associated with how synaesthetes perceive consistent or inconsistent stimuli is an extremely interesting subject and has been studied for the first time in this doctoral thesis.

Irrepressible reactions

Some of Callejas’ conclusions show that these emotional reactions occur automatically and can not be ignored. Moreover, they can affect the synaesthete to the point of slanting his or her preferences when faced with certain stimuli which correspond to his or her inner experiences. Even more important is the fact that these emotions can transform how they perceive events associated with these experiences. These events may have no emotional meaning initially but they can become more or less pleasant if they take place at the same time the synaesthete finds a word in the correct or incorrect colour.

‘Then, there are people for whom time units evoke colours – explains the researcher. It is also common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, sounds in general or music notes (people who can see music, for instance). There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, some link flavours to touch sensations, etc.’

An permanent vision

These researchers from Granada underline that synaesthetes always experience the same vision, synaesthesia is permanent (a given stimulus always evokes the same colour for one person) and idiosyncratic (it is different for each person). Therefore, if for a synaesthete the word dog is red, every time he or she sees it, it will be perceived as red.

Even though synaesthesia has been known for a long time, its scientific study is relatively recent. Writings such as the Castel one, in which reference is made to previous studies about a synaesthesia case in a blind person, are found in the 18th century. The evolution of the study of this phenomenon has been spectacular – the number of researchers working on this topic is constantly increasing, as will be evident in the Conference which will take place in Granada – and, as the phase of proving that this phenomenon exists has been overcome, explains Alicia Callejas, ‘we are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies.’ The results of her research have been published in the following prestigious scientific journals, among others: Cortex, Experimental Brain Research and Consciousness and Cognition.

Nowadays, the research field goes from grapheme-colour synaesthesia to other forms never studied before: flavours evoked by music or words (lexical-gustatory synaesthesia), space structures linked to time units, colours and music, etc.

Descargar


One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

– One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

A new study has examined a strange sensory condition, which causes people to taste music or see colours in words.

The condition, known as synaesthesia, causes two or more human senses to act as if they are interconnected, and is believed to affect up to one in a thousand people worldwide.

It is common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, University of Granada researcher Alicia Callejas Sevilla said.

There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, and some link flavours to touch sensations.

Ms Callejas, who looked into the most common type of synaesthesia known as grapheme-colour, in which letters, words and numbers evoke colours, has published her findings in the journal Cortex.

She said most people arent aware they have the condition, and become disappointed when they realise it is something that is not quite right.

When a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake, Ms Callejas said.

The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct.

She suggested that synaesthesia can affect an individuals choices or transform how they perceive certain events.

The survey also found that synaesthetes always experience the same result for a given stimulus (for example, the word lion always appears red) and that the experience was different for each person.

Ms Callejas believes synaesthesia research is coming of age more researchers turn their attention to the condition, which may result in the development of effective strategies for synaesthesia sufferers.

We are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies, Ms Callejas said.
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Synaesthesia affects one in 1000

– Synaesthesia affects one in 1000

A NEW study has examined a strange sensory condition, which causes people to taste music or see colours in words.

The condition, known as synaesthesia, causes two or more human senses to act as if they are interconnected, and is believed to affect up to one in a thousand people worldwide.

«It is common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, University of Granada researcher Alicia Callejas Sevilla said.

«There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, and some link flavours to touch sensations.

Ms Callejas, who looked into the most common type of synaesthesia known as grapheme-colour, in which letters, words and numbers evoke colours, has published her findings in the journal Cortex.

She said most people arent aware they have the condition, and become disappointed when they realise it is something that is not quite right.

«When a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake, Ms Callejas said.

«The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct.

She suggested that synaesthesia can affect an individuals choices or transform how they perceive certain events.

The survey also found that synaesthetes always experience the same result for a given stimulus (for example, the word lion always appears red) and that the experience was different for each person.

Ms Callejas believes synaesthesia research is coming of age more researchers turn their attention to the condition, which may result in the development of effective strategies for synaesthesia sufferers.

«We are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies, Ms Callejas said.

Descargar


One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

December 27, 2007 – 3:23PM

A new study has examined a strange sensory condition, which causes people to taste music or see colours in words.

The condition, known as synaesthesia, causes two or more human senses to act as if they are interconnected, and is believed to affect up to one in a thousand people worldwide.

It is common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, University of Granada researcher Alicia Callejas Sevilla said.

There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, and some link flavours to touch sensations.

Ms Callejas, who looked into the most common type of synaesthesia known as grapheme-colour, in which letters, words and numbers evoke colours, has published her findings in the journal Cortex.

She said most people arent aware they have the condition, and become disappointed when they realise it is something that is not quite right.

When a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake, Ms Callejas said.

The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct.

She suggested that synaesthesia can affect an individuals choices or transform how they perceive certain events.

The survey also found that synaesthetes always experience the same result for a given stimulus (for example, the word lion always appears red) and that the experience was different for each person.

Ms Callejas believes synaesthesia research is coming of age more researchers turn their attention to the condition, which may result in the development of effective strategies for synaesthesia sufferers.

We are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies, Ms Callejas said.

© 2007 AAP
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One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

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December 27, 2007 – 4:23PM
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A new study has examined a strange sensory condition, which causes people to taste music or see colours in words.

The condition, known as synaesthesia, causes two or more human senses to act as if they are interconnected, and is believed to affect up to one in a thousand people worldwide.

It is common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, University of Granada researcher Alicia Callejas Sevilla said.

There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, and some link flavours to touch sensations.

Ms Callejas, who looked into the most common type of synaesthesia known as grapheme-colour, in which letters, words and numbers evoke colours, has published her findings in the journal Cortex.

She said most people arent aware they have the condition, and become disappointed when they realise it is something that is not quite right.

When a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake, Ms Callejas said.

The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct.

She suggested that synaesthesia can affect an individuals choices or transform how they perceive certain events.

The survey also found that synaesthetes always experience the same result for a given stimulus (for example, the word lion always appears red) and that the experience was different for each person.

Ms Callejas believes synaesthesia research is coming of age more researchers turn their attention to the condition, which may result in the development of effective strategies for synaesthesia sufferers.

We are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies, Ms Callejas said.

© 2007 AAP
Descargar


One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

One in 1,000 have cross-wired senses

Email
Print
Normal font
Large font
December 27, 2007 – 4:23PM
Advertisement

Advertisement

A new study has examined a strange sensory condition, which causes people to taste music or see colours in words.

The condition, known as synaesthesia, causes two or more human senses to act as if they are interconnected, and is believed to affect up to one in a thousand people worldwide.

It is common for a synaesthete to see colours when listening to words, University of Granada researcher Alicia Callejas Sevilla said.

There are also cases, although fewer, where people can see colours in flavours, others perceive flavours or experience touch sensations when listening to different sounds, and some link flavours to touch sensations.

Ms Callejas, who looked into the most common type of synaesthesia known as grapheme-colour, in which letters, words and numbers evoke colours, has published her findings in the journal Cortex.

She said most people arent aware they have the condition, and become disappointed when they realise it is something that is not quite right.

When a person with grapheme-colour synaesthesia indicates that the word table is blue, it is quite probable that if he or she ever sees the same word written in a colour other than blue, this word will appear to him or her as wrong and consider it a mistake, Ms Callejas said.

The synaesthete might even point out that the word is ugly or that he or she does not like it because it is not correct.

She suggested that synaesthesia can affect an individuals choices or transform how they perceive certain events.

The survey also found that synaesthetes always experience the same result for a given stimulus (for example, the word lion always appears red) and that the experience was different for each person.

Ms Callejas believes synaesthesia research is coming of age more researchers turn their attention to the condition, which may result in the development of effective strategies for synaesthesia sufferers.

We are starting to approach questions of major theoretical importance, and to develop adequate study strategies, Ms Callejas said.
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