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- History_of_synesthesia_research abstract "Synesthesia is a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled. For example, in a form of synesthesia known as grapheme-color synesthesia, letters or numbers may be perceived as inherently colored. Historically, the most commonly described form of synesthesia (or synesthesia-like mappings) has been between sound and vision, e.g. the hearing of colors in music.".
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageExternalLink cortex.asp?action=toArticles&folderID=176.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageExternalLink Synesthesia-List.html.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageExternalLink baudelaire.html.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageExternalLink rimbaud.html.
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- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageRevisionID "633913741".
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Binet.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink American_Synesthesia_Association.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink An_Essay_Concerning_Human_Understanding.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Rimbaud.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Behaviorism.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Category:Synesthesia.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Baudelaire.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Cognitive_revolution.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Consciousness.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Cretien_van_Campen.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Denis_Diderot.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Erasmus_Darwin.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Francis_Galton.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Functional_neuroimaging.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Gottfried_Wilhelm_Leibniz.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Grapheme_→_color_synesthesia.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Gustav_Fechner.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Henry_David_Thoreau.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink History_of_psychology.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Newton.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink John_Locke.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Lucasian_Professor_of_Mathematics.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Neural_basis_of_synesthesia.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink New_Essays_on_Human_Understanding.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Nicholas_Saunderson.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Psychophysics.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Ralph_Waldo_Emerson.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Sense.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Simon_Baron-Cohen.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Symbolism_(arts).
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Synesthesia.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Synesthesia_in_art.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink UK_Synaesthesia_Association.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Cambridge.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLink Wilhelm_Wundt.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageWikiLinkText "History of synesthesia research".
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quotation.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- History_of_synesthesia_research subject Category:Synesthesia.
- History_of_synesthesia_research hypernym Condition.
- History_of_synesthesia_research type Disease.
- History_of_synesthesia_research type Disorder.
- History_of_synesthesia_research comment "Synesthesia is a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled. For example, in a form of synesthesia known as grapheme-color synesthesia, letters or numbers may be perceived as inherently colored. Historically, the most commonly described form of synesthesia (or synesthesia-like mappings) has been between sound and vision, e.g. the hearing of colors in music.".
- History_of_synesthesia_research label "History of synesthesia research".
- History_of_synesthesia_research sameAs Q17155699.
- History_of_synesthesia_research sameAs m.011bbbjr.
- History_of_synesthesia_research sameAs Q17155699.
- History_of_synesthesia_research wasDerivedFrom History_of_synesthesia_research?oldid=633913741.
- History_of_synesthesia_research isPrimaryTopicOf History_of_synesthesia_research.