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A distinct electrophysiological signature for synaesthesia that is independent of individual differences in sensory sensitivity

Authors :
Ward, Jamie
Sherman, Maxine
Beste, Christian
Schreiter, Marie
Chew, Jowinn
Dyson, Ben
Baykova, Reny
Source :
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. 139
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

People with synaesthesia have been reported to show atypical electrophysiological responses to certain simple sensory stimuli, even if these stimuli are not inducers of synaesthesia. However, it is unclear whether this constitutes a neural marker that is relatively specific to synaesthesia or whether it reflects some other trait that co-occurs with synaesthesia, but is not specific to it. One candidate is atypical sensory sensitivity (e.g., strong aversion to certain lights and sounds, 'sensory overload') which is a feature of both synaesthesia and autism and that varies greatly in the neurotypical population. Using visual evoked-potentials (to stimuli varying in spatial frequency) and auditory-evoked potentials (to stimuli varying in auditory frequency), we found that synaesthetes had a modulated visual evoked-potential around P1/N1 (emanating from fusiform cortex), a greater auditory N1, as well as differences in the time-frequency domain (increased alpha and beta induced power for visual stimuli). This was distinct from that found in non-synaesthetes. By contrast, no significant electrophysiological differences were found that were linked to neurotypical variation in sensory sensitivity.

Details

ISSN :
19738102 and 00109452
Volume :
139
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e5caf23dc3225b47b90480e4b7fe023