shopping cart
nothing in cart
 
browse by subject
new releases
best sellers
sale books
browse by author
browse by publisher
home
about us
upcoming events
Mar 23rd - Navigating the Nervous System: A Polyvagal Approach to Working with Complex Trauma [Centre for MindBody Health]
Mar 24th - Working with 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in a Clinical Setting [OAMHP]
Mar 24th - Foundations of Africentric Social Work [OASW]
Mar 27th - 8 Week Mindful Self-Compassion Program [Centre for MindBody Health]
Mar 27th - Trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy: Blending theory with innovative techniques [SickKids CCMH Learning Institute]
schools agencies and other institutional orders (click here)
Open for browsing 9-6 Mon-Sat and 12-5 Sunday. Free shipping across Canada for orders over $150. Please read our Covid-19 statement here.
Join our mailing list! Click here to sign up.
Synesthesia | The MIT Press Essential Knowledge Series (2002)
Richard E. Cytowic, M.D.
MIT Press (Trade) / Softcover / Apr 2018
9780262535090 (ISBN-10: 0262535092)
Neuropsychology / Psychology
price: $22.95 (may be subject to change)
288 pages
Not in Stock, usually ships in 3-6 business days

An accessible, concise primer on the neurological trait of synesthesia -- vividly felt sensory couplings -- by a founder of the field.

One in twenty-three people carry the genes for the synesthesia. Not a disorder but a neurological trait -- like perfect pitch -- synesthesia creates vividly felt cross-sensory couplings. A synesthete might hear a voice and at the same time see it as a color or shape, taste its distinctive flavor, or feel it as a physical touch. In this volume in the MIT Press Essential Knowledge series, Richard Cytowic, the expert who returned synesthesia to mainstream science after decades of oblivion, offers a concise, accessible primer on this fascinating human experience.

Cytowic explains that synesthesia's most frequent manifestation is seeing days of the week as colored, followed by sensing letters, numerals, and punctuation marks in different hues even when printed in black. Other manifestations include tasting food in shapes, seeing music in moving colors, and mapping numbers and other sequences spatially. One synesthete declares, "Chocolate smells pink and sparkly"; another invents a dish (chicken, vanilla ice cream, and orange juice concentrate) that tastes intensely blue. Cytowic, who in the 1980s revived scientific interest in synesthesia, sees it now understood as a spectrum, an umbrella term that covers five clusters of outwardly felt couplings that can occur via several pathways. Yet synesthetic or not, each brain uniquely filters what it perceives. Cytowic reminds us that each individual's perspective on the world is thoroughly subjective.

About the Author:

Richard E. Cytowic, M.D., MFA, a pioneering researcher in synesthesia, is Professor of Neurology at George Washington University. He is the author of Synesthesia: A Union of the Senses, The Man Who Tasted Shapes, The Neurological Side of Neuropsychology and (with David M. Eagleman) the Montaigne Medal--winner Wednesday Is Indigo Blue: Discovering the Brain of Synesthesia, all published by the MIT Press.

Caversham Booksellers
98 Harbord St, Toronto, ON M5S 1G6 Canada
(click for map and directions)
All prices in $cdn
Copyright 2022

Phone toll-free (800) 361-6120
Tel (416) 944-0962 | Fax (416) 944-0963
E-mail [email protected]
Hours: 9-6 Mon-Sat / Sunday 12-5 (EST)

search
Click here to read previous issues.
authors
Cytowic, Richard E
other lists
MIT Press
MIT Press (Trade)
Neuropsychology
Psychology
The MIT Press Essential Knowledge Series