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Linguistic Synaesthesia: A Meta-analysis

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

Linguistic synesthesias combine different senses, as in English smooth melody (touch→sound). For nearly a century, researchers have gathered data that has been interpreted as supporting the notion of a hierarchical ordering of the senses. According to this proposal, expressions map the presumed-to-be 'lower' senses of touch, taste, and smell onto the presumed-to-be 'higher' senses of sound and sight. Here, this proposal is tested in the first-ever meta-analysis of linguistic synesthesias, combining thirty-eight datasets from fourteen different languages. The authors demonstrate that clear patterns emerge from the data, but many such patterns are inconsistent with the notion of a linear hierarchical order or a simple lower/higher divide of the senses. This calls for a shift in what theories are considered to be viable for explaining asymmetries between the senses in linguistic synesthesia.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherCambridge University Press
Number of pages84
ISBN (Electronic)9781009519182, 9781009519151
ISBN (Print)9781009519168, 9781009519144
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2025

Publication series

NameElements in Cognitive Linguistics
PublisherCambridge University Press

Keywords

  • perception
  • senses
  • smell
  • taste
  • sound
  • sight
  • vision
  • audition
  • olfaction
  • gustation
  • synaesthesia
  • linguistics
  • metaphor

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