Our senses are constantly reached by a multitude of stimuli from all different sensory modalities. To create a coherent representation of the environment, we must integrate the various unimodal inputs that refer to the same object into a single multimodal representation. In some cases, however, we tend to bind certain properties of the stimuli without any apparent reason, which is a phenomenon named crossmodal correspondence. For instance, we match a spiky or a rounded shape with the sound "Kiki" or "Bouba", respectively. Similarly, we associate the left hemispace with low luminance and the right one with high luminance. Instances of crossmodal correspondences were described also in other mammals, and recently, a case of space-luminance cro...
Cross-modal correspondences describe the widespread tendency for attributes in one sensory modality ...
Amodal (redundant) and arbitrary cross-sensory feature associations involve the context-insensitive ...
Crossmodal correspondences are a feature of human perception in which two or more sensory dimensions...
Our senses are constantly reached by a multitude of stimuli from all different sensory modalities. T...
Crossmodal correspondences are spontaneous associations of non-redundant information across differen...
Humans possess intuitive associations linking certain non-redundant features of stimuli—e.g. high-pi...
Crossmodal correspondences are intuitively held relationships between non-redundant features of a st...
Crossmodal correspondences are intuitively held relationships between non-redundant features of a st...
For both humans and other animals, the ability to combine information obtained through different sen...
Selective attention to different properties of stimulation provides the foundation for perception, l...
There are many seemingly arbitrary associations between different perceptual properties across modal...
Crossmodal correspondences are intuitions about how the senses map together. They are a way in which...
The Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH; Bahrick & Lickliter, 2000, 2002, 2012) predicts that ea...
For more than a century now, researchers have acknowledged the existence of crossmodal congruency ef...
The Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH; Bahrick & Lickliter, 2000, 2002, 2012) predicts that ea...
Cross-modal correspondences describe the widespread tendency for attributes in one sensory modality ...
Amodal (redundant) and arbitrary cross-sensory feature associations involve the context-insensitive ...
Crossmodal correspondences are a feature of human perception in which two or more sensory dimensions...
Our senses are constantly reached by a multitude of stimuli from all different sensory modalities. T...
Crossmodal correspondences are spontaneous associations of non-redundant information across differen...
Humans possess intuitive associations linking certain non-redundant features of stimuli—e.g. high-pi...
Crossmodal correspondences are intuitively held relationships between non-redundant features of a st...
Crossmodal correspondences are intuitively held relationships between non-redundant features of a st...
For both humans and other animals, the ability to combine information obtained through different sen...
Selective attention to different properties of stimulation provides the foundation for perception, l...
There are many seemingly arbitrary associations between different perceptual properties across modal...
Crossmodal correspondences are intuitions about how the senses map together. They are a way in which...
The Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH; Bahrick & Lickliter, 2000, 2002, 2012) predicts that ea...
For more than a century now, researchers have acknowledged the existence of crossmodal congruency ef...
The Intersensory Redundancy Hypothesis (IRH; Bahrick & Lickliter, 2000, 2002, 2012) predicts that ea...
Cross-modal correspondences describe the widespread tendency for attributes in one sensory modality ...
Amodal (redundant) and arbitrary cross-sensory feature associations involve the context-insensitive ...
Crossmodal correspondences are a feature of human perception in which two or more sensory dimensions...