Stefani Anash’s research while affiliated with SABA University School of Medicine and other places

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Publications (1)


Grapheme-Color Synesthesia and Its Connection to Memory
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

August 2024

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134 Reads

Cureus

Stefani Anash

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Andrew Boileau

Synesthesia is the involuntary association of different senses, where individuals experience one sensory modality in response to the stimulation of another. For example, a synesthete may perceive colors when reading certain numbers or associate specific tastes with particular words. Synesthesia manifests differently for individuals grouping the condition in subcategories such as grapheme-color, sound-to-color, lexical-gustatory, mirror-touch, and much more. This review covers grapheme-color synesthesia, described as the involuntary perception of specific colors or color associations when seeing or thinking about certain letters, numbers, or symbols. This review explores the performance of declarative memory tasks in individuals with grapheme-color synesthesia. A comprehensive search of controlled trials published between 2014 to 2024 was conducted through PubMed and Google Scholar databases. In Google Scholar, the search terms grapheme-color synesthesia, grapheme-color synaesthesia, and memory were used. In PubMed, additional MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) terms were used which included grapheme-color synesthesia and memory. Studies that measured declarative memory and grapheme-color synesthesia were included yielding a total of seven controlled trials. Grapheme-color synesthetes demonstrated advanced performance in declarative memory tasks; however, this may not have any clinical significance. Grapheme-color synesthetes demonstrated a better performance in their ability to recall colors, but not as much recalling words. Synesthetes were shown to outperform non-synesthetes in visual memory tasks. Synesthetes showed better recall of paired patterns, shape-color associations, and visual grids compared to control groups, but the influence of synesthesia on word memory remains unclear. Future research should consider adding control for confounding factors, collaborating with other institutions, and increasing sample size.

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