Vowel-colour associations in non-synesthetes: A study with Spanish and Arabic participants

Authors

  • Pilar Mompeán Guillamón Department of English, University of Murcia, Spain Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2011/04/0019/000188

Keywords:

cardinal vowels, colours, synesthesia, synesthetic symbolism

Abstract

The present paper aims at contributing to the field of sound symbolism and, more specifically, to the association between sounds and colours as established by nonsynesthetes. A study based on a forced-choice task performed by Spanish and Arabic speakers is presented. The study asks participants to listen to primary cardinal vowels and choose from a range of colours the one considered most suitable for the sound. The data gathered reinforce previous results that non-synesthetic participants are able to significantly associate vowel sounds and colours at a better than chance degree. However, results seem to go against the general idea that the associations are cross-linguistic, although the phenomenon itself seems to be.

 

References

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Westbury, C. 2005. Implicit sound symbolism in lexical access: Evidence from an interference task. Brain and Language 93, 10-19.

Wrembel, M. 2007. ―Still sounds like a rainbow‖ – a proposal for a coloured vowel chart. In Proc. of the Phonetics Teaching & Learning Language Conference, August 2007.

Wrembel, M., Rataj, K. 2008. Sounds like a rainbow. In Proc. of the 2nd ISCA Workshop of Experimental Linguistics, August 2008, Athens, Greece, 237-240.

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Published

01-01-2011

How to Cite

Vowel-colour associations in non-synesthetes: A study with Spanish and Arabic participants. (2011). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 4(1), 79-82. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2011/04/0019/000188

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