Here are some audiovisual aftereffects that might be relevant:
Kitagawa, N., and Ichihara, W. (2002). Hearing visual motion in depth. Nature 416, 172–174.
Bertelson, P., Vroomen, J., De Gelder, B., 2003. Visual recalibration of auditory speech identification: a McGurk aftereffect. Psychol. Sci. 14, 592–597.
Frissen, I., Vroomen, J., De Gelder, B., Bertelson, P., 2003. The aftereffects of ventriloquism: are they sound frequency specific? Acta Psychol. 113, 315–327.
On Apr 4, 2011, at 4:18 AM, Jose Ignacio Alcantara wrote:
Hi Tassos,
This is obviously synesthesia you are referring to? Ramachandran and his colleague, Hubbard, have looked into this. See:
Marks, L.E. (1975). On colored-hearing synesthesia: cross-modal translations of sensory dimensions. Psychol. Bull. 82, 303–331.
Hubbard, E.M., Manohar, S., and Ramachandran, V.S. (2006). Contrast affects the strength of synesthetic colors. Cortex, 42, 184-194.
Cheers, Jose
On 4 Apr 2011, at 20:22, Anastasios Sarampalis wrote:
Dear list,
Is anyone aware of any research that looks at audiovisual contrast effects? By that, I mean effects like sound intensity or pitch affecting the perception of colour intensity or luminance (or vice versa).
thank you,
Tassos Sarampalis
Dr José Ignacio Alcántara
Department of Experimental Psychology University of Cambridge Downing Street Cambridge, UK CB2 3EB Phone: 44 (0)1223 764412 Fax: 44 (0)1223 333564
Fellow of Fitzwilliam College Cambridge, UK CB3 0DG Phone: 44 (0)1223 472126
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