6 May 2012

Sensational natural combination of senses



Synesthesia (also spelled synæsthesia or synaesthesia, plural synesthesiae or synaesthesiae), from the ancient Greek σύν (syn), "together," and αἴσθησις (aisthēsis), "sensation," is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway. (...)
In one common form of synesthesia, known as grapheme → color synesthesia or color-graphemic synesthesia, letters or numbers are perceived as inherently colored, while in ordinal linguistic personification, numbers, days of the week and months of the year evoke personalities. 

(...) Synesthesia runs strongly in families, but the precise mode of inheritance has yet to be ascertained. Synesthesia is also sometimes reported by individuals under the influence of psychedelic drugs, after a stroke, during a temporal lobe epilepsy seizure, or as a result ofblindness or deafness.(...)

THE VARIOUS FORMS OF SYNESTHESIA

Synesthesia can occur between nearly any two senses or perceptual modes, and at least one synesthete, Solomon Shereshevsky, experienced synesthesia that linked all five senses. Given the large number of forms of synesthesia, researchers have adopted a convention of indicating the type of synesthesia by using the following notation x → y, where x is the "inducer" or trigger experience, and y is the "concurrent" or additional experience. For example, perceiving letters and numbers (collectively called graphemes) as colored would be indicated as grapheme → color synesthesia. Similarly, when synesthetes see colors and movement as a result of hearing musical tones, it would be indicated as tone → (color, movement) synesthesia. (...)


  • Grapheme-color synesthesia


In one of the most common forms of synesthesia, grapheme → color synesthesia, individual letters of the alphabet and numbers (collectively referred to as graphemes), are "shaded" or "tinged" with a color. While different individuals usually do not report the same colors for all letters and numbers, studies with large numbers of synesthetes find some commonalities across letters (e.g., A is likely to be red).
As a child, Pat Duffy told her father, "I realized that to make an R all I had to do was first write a P and draw a line down from its loop. And I was so surprised that I could turn a yellow letter into an orange letter just by adding a line." Another grapheme synesthete says, "When I read, about five words around the exact one I'm reading are in color. It's also the only way I can spell. In elementary school I remember knowing how to spell the word 'priority' [with an "i" rather than an "e"] because ... an 'e' was out of place in that word because 'e's were yellow and didn't fit."

  • Spatial Sequence synesthesia

A special form of the condition, in which people tend to see all numerical sequences they come across as points in space. For instance, the number 1 might be farther away and the number 2 might be closer. A new study shows that those with SSS have superior memories. They were able to recall past events and memories far better, and in far greater detail then those without the condition.

  • Sound> Colour  synesthesia

According to Richard Cytowic, sound → color synesthesia is "something like fireworks": voice, music, and assorted environmental sounds such as clattering dishes or dog barks trigger color and firework shapes that arise, move around, and then fade when the sound ends. For some, the stimulus type is limited (e.g., music only, or even just a specific musical key); for others, a wide variety of sounds triggers synesthesia.

Sound often changes the perceived hue, brightness, scintillation, and directional movement. Some individuals see music on a "screen" in front of their faces. Deni Simon, for whom music produces waving lines "like oscilloscope configurations—lines moving in color, often metallic with height, width and, most importantly, depth. My favorite music has lines that extend horizontally beyond the 'screen' area."
Individuals rarely agree on what color a given sound is (composers Liszt and Rimsky-Korsakov famously disagreed on the colors of music keys); however, synesthetes show the same trends as non-synesthetes do. For example, both groups say that loud tones are brighter than soft tones, and that lower tones are darker than higher tones. Synaesthetes nevertheless choose more precise colours than non-synesthetes and are more consistent in their choice of colours given a set of sounds of varying pitch, timbre and composition.

  • Number Form Synesthesia

A number form from one of Francis Galton's subjects.[11] Note how the first 12 digits correspond to a clock face.

From Wednesday is Indigo Blue.[3] Note this example's upside-down clock face.
A number form is a mental map of numbers, which automatically and involuntarily appears whenever someone who experiences number-forms thinks of numbers. Number forms were first documented and named by Francis Galton in "The Visions of Sane Persons". Later research has identified them as a type of synesthesia.In particular, it has been suggested that number-forms are a result of "cross-activation" between regions of the parietal lobe that are involved in numerical cognition and spatial cognition. In addition to its interest as a form of synesthesia, researchers in numerical cognition have begun to explore this form of synesthesia for the insights that it may provide into the neural mechanisms of numerical-spatial associations present unconsciously in everyone.

  • Personnification

Ordinal-linguistic personification (OLP, or personification for short) is a form of synesthesia in which ordered sequences, such as ordinal numbersdaysmonths and letters are associated with personalities.[ Although this form of synesthesia was documented as early as the 1890s modern research has, until recently,[ paid little attention to this form.
For example, one synesthete says, "T’s are generally crabbed, ungenerous creatures. U is a soulless sort of thing. 4 is honest, but… 3 I cannot trust… 9 is dark, a gentleman, tall and graceful, but politic under his suavity."Likewise, Cytowic's subject MT says, "I [is] a bit of a worrier at times, although easy-going; J [is] male; appearing jocular, but with strength of character; K [is] female; quiet, responsible....
For some people in addition to numbers and other ordinal sequences, objects are sometimes imbued with a sense of personality. Recent research has begun to show that alphanumeric personification co-varies with other forms of synesthesia, and is consistent and automatic, as required to be considered a form of synesthesia


  • Lexical → Gustatory Synesthesia 

In the rare lexical → gustatory synesthesia, individual words and the phonemes of spoken language evoke taste sensations in the mouth. According to James Wannerton, "Whenever I hear, read, or articulate (inner speech) words or word sounds, I experience an immediate and involuntary taste sensation on my tongue. These very specific taste associations never change and have remained the same for as long as I can remember."
Jamie Ward and Julia Simner have extensively studied this form of synesthesia, and have found that the synesthetic associations are constrained by early food experiences.For example, James Wannerton has no synesthetic experiences of coffee or curry, even though he consumes them regularly as an adult. Conversely, he tastes certain breakfast cereals and candies that are no longer sold.
Additionally, these early food experiences are often paired with tastes based on the phonemes in the name of the word (e.g., /I/, /n/ and /s/ trigger James Wannerton’s taste of mince) although others have less obvious roots (e.g., /f/ triggers sherbet). To show that phonemes, rather than graphemes are the critical triggers of tastes, Ward and Simner showed that, for James Wannerton, the taste of egg is associated to the phoneme /k/, whether spelled with a "c" (e.g., accept), "k" (e.g., York), "ck" (e.g., chuck) or "x" (e.g., fax). Another source of tastes comes from semantic influences, so that food names tend to taste of the food they match, and the word "blue" tastes "inky."

  • Mirror Synesthesia 


Synesthesia visual- tactile: the synesthete see another person beeing touched at one part of the body, they will feel exactly the same sensation at this mere place of the body, like they were effectively touched themselves. (...)

Artists & synesthesia

(...) Founder of Pink FloydSyd Barrett, is thought to have had synesthesia.

Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky combined four senses: color, hearing, touch, and smell.

Thom Yorke, musician(Radiohead)
  • Colour→ music

French poets Arthur Rimbaud and Charles Baudelaire wrote of synesthetic experience but there is no evidence they were synesthetes themselves. (...)



VOYELLES



A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, O bleu, voyelles,
Je dirai quelque jour vos naissances latentes.
A, noir corset velu des mouches éclatantes
Qui bombillent autour des puanteurs cruelles,
Golfe d’ombre ; E, candeur des vapeurs et des tentes,
Lance des glaciers fiers, rois blancs, frissons d’ombelles
I, pourpres, sang craché, rire des lèvres belles
Dans la colère ou les ivresses pénitentes ;
U, cycles, vibrements divins des mers virides,
Paix des pâtis semés d’animaux, paix des rides
Que l’alchimie imprime aux grands fronts studieux ;
O, suprême Clairon plein des strideurs étranges,
Silences traversés des Mondes et des Anges :
— O l’Oméga, rayon violet de Ses Yeux !

Arthur Rimbaud

Sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synesthesia
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synesth%C3%A9sie
http://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Voyelles/%C3%89dition_Vanier_1895

20 Apr 2012

Solution is playing a lot






The prestigious magazine Nature Structural and Molecular Biology publicated an article which revealed the structure of an enzyme used by retrovirus similar to HIV. This discovery has been widely considered as a major advance. And whom solved this enigma? A group of video games's amateurs. 

Foldit, a new experience created by a group of scientits and conceptors of video games at the university of Washington asked to the players (some of them still studying at the secondary school and without any scientific knowldeges, and even less in microbiology) to determine how the protein fall back into the enzime. 

Within a few hours, about a thousands people confront one eachother and cooperate. Three weeks later, they succeed where the biologists and the computers failed:"It is the first example of video games's amateurs having solved a long term scientific problem", wrote David Baker, co-founder of Foldit at the time.  
(....)



source: traduced from http://www.slate.fr/story/51211/internautes-remplacent-entrepreneurs-crowdsourcing

3 Apr 2012

Boogy swirling origins


Have you ever woken up in the middle of a summer night  at 4.36 am wondering: how is called the "dot" at the center of the shell? Well, me neither. But I'd like to share that:








It is called an apex (Latin for top, peak, summit).Congrats, now you're life has all the sudden taken a new course. Knowledge is powa! But as Shakespeare wrote:"What's in a name? That which we call a roseBy any other name would smell as sweet."Apex is just the referring term created to clarify the idea and the perception of theses "starting points". 

The linguistic term is also reused in many disciplines to qualify the origin of "things", related sometimes to their"geometrical" peak.

Some examples:
  • Solar apex, the direction that our solar system travels through in our Galaxy

Sources: http://www.enotes.com/shakespeare-quotes/what-s-name-that-which-we-call-rose
cache of www.infovisual.info/02/010_fr.htmlhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apex
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apex

28 Mar 2012

Love drives us cleverly blind..

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2009/sep/06/steven-russell-elizabeth-day-jim-carrey

Please read this comment after you read the article for more details on the case:

On the one hand, the life imprisonment sentence (and especially its isolation conditions) seems clearly far too harsh and disproportionate. Does this man really represent a danger for the society? Facts are that he never hurted anybody (only endangered himself). 
On the other hand, this man, a smart and exceptionally skilled liar, chameleon has strong impetus.. By having no limits, he lost control of himself, self-destruction, even indirect, could lead to a potential danger...And even if he is character is charming in the movie, he managed to steal a great deal of money completely illegally.
Far too clever for the police probably, the "system" just decided  to suppress the problem at its roots with drastic solution: jail for life and restricted human contacts. 


Has the administration proven here the of lack its justice system's inventiveness? Isn't it possible to create solutions that are not so severe for individuals? Isn't the prize a little bit too high to pay?

Roman edge of modernity

Saturnalia was an ancient Roman festival in honor of the deity Saturn originally held December 17 and later expanded with unofficial festivities through December 23. The holiday was celebrated with a sacrifice at the Temple of Saturn in the Roman Forum and a public banquet, followed by private gift-giving, continual partying, and a carnival atmosphere thttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Man_pilos_Louvre_MNE1330.jpghat overturnedRoman social normsgambling was permitted, and masters provided table service for their slaves. The poet Catullus called it "the best of days."
In Roman mythology, Saturn was an agricultural deity who reigned over the world in the Golden Age, when humans enjoyed the spontaneous bounty of the earth without labor in a state of social egalitarianism. The revelries of Saturnalia were supposed to reflect the conditions of the lost mythical age, not all of them desirable. The Greek equivalent was the Kronia.



[...]

Saturnalia is the best-known of several festivals in the Greco-Roman world characterized by role reversals and behavioral license. Slaves were treated to a banquet of the kind usually enjoyed by their masters. Ancient sources differ on the circumstances: some suggest that master and slave dined together, while others indicate that the slaves feasted first, or that the masters actually served the food. The practice may have varied over time,and in any case slaves would still have prepared the meal.

Saturnalian license also permitted slaves to enjoy a pretense of disrespect for their masters, and exempted them from punishment. It was a time for free speech: the Augustan poet Horace calls it "December liberty."In two satires set during the Saturnalia, Horace has a slave offer sharp criticism to his master.But everyone knew that the leveling of the social hierarchy was temporary and had limits; no social norms were ultimately threatened, because the holiday would end.
The toga, the characteristic garment of the male Roman citizen, was set aside in favor of the Greek synthesis, colourful "dinner clothes" otherwise considered in poor taste for daytime wear. Romans of citizen status normally went about bare-headed, but for the Saturnalia donned the pilleus, the conical felt cap that was the usual mark of a freedman. Slaves, who ordinarily were not entitled to wear the pilleus, wore it as well, so that everyone was "pilleated" without distinction.






The participation of freeborn Roman women is implied by sources that name gifts for women, but their presence at banquets may have depended on the custom of their time; from the late Republic onward, women mingled socially with men more freely than they had in earlier times. Female entertainers were certainly present at some otherwise all-male gatherings.
Role-playing was implicit in the Saturnalia's status reversals, and there are hints of mask-wearing or "guising". No theatrical events are mentioned in connection with the festivities, but the classicist Erich Segal saw Roman comedy, with its cast of impudent, free-wheeling slaves and libertine seniors, as imbued with the Saturnalian spirit.
Gambling and dice-playing, normally prohibited or at least frowned upon, were permitted for all, even slaves. Coins and nuts were the stakes. On the Calendar of Philocalus, the Saturnalia is represented by a man wearing a fur-trimmed coat next to a table with dice, and a caption reading "Now you have license, slave, to game with your master."Rampant overeating and drunkenness became the rule, and a sober person the exception.
Seneca looked forward to the holiday, if somewhat tentatively, in a letter to a friend:
It is now the month of December, when the greatest part of the city is in a bustle. Loose reins are given to public dissipation; everywhere you may hear the sound of great preparations, as if there were some real difference between the days devoted to Saturn and those for transacting business. … Were you here, I would willingly confer with you as to the plan of our conduct; whether we should eve in our usual way, or, to avoid singularity, both take a better supper and throw off the toga.
Some Romans found it all a bit much. Pliny describes a secluded suite of rooms in his Laurentine villa which he used as a retreat "especially during the Saturnalia when the rest of the house is noisy with the licence of the holiday and festive cries. This way I don't hamper the games of my people and they don't hinder my work or studies."






Sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturnalia#cite_note-16
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Man_pilos_Louvre_MNE1330.jpg

9 Mar 2012

Pink is not dead




The colour pink would not exist.

[...]

The colors are simply waves of light and we are seeing them anyways with our brain. But there is no wave  that mixes red and violet, and pink is not hence a wave of light.


[...]


The blogger of American scientist Michael Moyer, does not agree with this point. He admits that pink does not exists, but only because in facts no colour exists really.

"The world is full of electromagnetic radiations, which proprieties are physical, as the wave's lenght or its intensity. But the colour is entirely in your head".

He developed the idea that the colour is not a property of the light or objects that reflects the light, but a "feeling that merges in our brain" by a process mysterious as well as fascinating (it has been recently discovered that it was possible for people to see some forbidden colors, colours impossible to see with the brain, such as green tinted with red or blue -yellow).


8 Mar 2012

Antimatter matters!

The moment where antihydrogen's atoms came out of the trap invented, by scientists of the CERN, to, in the end, disapear


[...]


"Why does something exists instead of nothing?" Indeed, according to the current state of our knowledges, nothing should be existing. After the Big Bang, it would seem that matter and antimatter have been existing in equal amount. Or in the presence of one and the other, the both entities annihiliate , that is to say nothing remains...nothing. Yet, it is not what has happend, by far! Though this original nihilist coexistence, and according to the facts that first the antimatter disappeared and second that the matter did remain alone. Knowing that the matter, constitues the visible universe for instance the cells of our body. The opposite should have happend. Why nature did favour the matter? Mystery...


[...]