synesthesie
Synesthesie, also written synesthesia in English, is a perceptual condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway involuntarily elicits an additional experience in a second, distinct pathway. The extra experiences are automatic and perceived as part of normal perception rather than as deliberate imagination.
The most common forms include grapheme–color synesthesia (letters or numbers evoke specific colors), sound–color synesthesia (sounds
Prevalence estimates vary, but synesthesia is considered relatively rare, occurring in perhaps 1–4% of the population
Causes and neuroscience research propose models involving increased cross-activation between sensory regions or disinhibition of feedback
Diagnosis is typically based on self-report corroborated by consistency tests across time. The condition is usually