Imagine your brain is like a busy playground where different senses, sight, sound, touch, all come to play together. Jamie Ward studies how this happens in people with synesthesia, which means their brain connects different senses in special ways.
Like a Super-Sensitive Playground
Normally, when you see something red, it's just your eyes telling your brain about the color. But for someone with synesthesia, seeing red might also make them feel warm, like touching a cozy blanket on a cold day. It’s as if their brain says, “Hey, I’ve seen this before, let me add some extra fun to the experience!”
How It All Works
In the brain, there are special highways called neurons that send messages between different parts. In most people, these highways have clear signs saying, “Go to vision,” or “Go to hearing.” But in synesthesia, some of those signs get mixed up, like a mail truck delivering letters to the wrong houses.
So when someone with synesthesia sees a number, their brain might also hear a sound, it's like having two senses play together on the same slide. Jamie Ward helps us understand how this fun mix-up happens and why it makes some people see, hear, or feel things in such special ways. Imagine your brain is like a busy playground where different senses, sight, sound, touch, all come to play together. Jamie Ward studies how this happens in people with synesthesia, which means their brain connects different senses in special ways.
Examples
- Someone tastes the shape of a letter.
- Synesthesia is like having extra senses.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does The Weird Reason Some People Can Taste Colors Work?
- 1212 ~ Number Synchronicities ~ Are You Seeing This ?
- AI Literacy: How do AI Image Generators Work?
- Analysis: Will Republicans stick with lame-duck Trump?
- 1 - What is an emotion?