grapheme-color

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From grapheme +‎ color.

Adjective

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grapheme-color (not comparable)

  1. Relating to the perception of colors caused by the sensing of graphemes. Often modifies the term "synesthesia" or "synesthete".
    • 2013, Dani Cavallaro, Synesthesia and the Arts[1], McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, →ISBN, page 8, →ISBN:
      Almost as frequent as grapheme-color synesthesia is the type of crosssensory perception in which sounds are perceived as colored (sound-color synesthesia or colored hearing).
    • 2015, Aleksandra Maria Rogowska, Synaesthesia and Individual Differences[2], Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 133, →ISBN:
      Hence, grapheme-colour synaesthetes could often experience a negative emotional response and anger if they read a text with the 'wrong colours' on billboards, on television, or in books.
    • 2015, Colby Marshall, Double Vision[3], Penguin Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 76, →ISBN:
      Grapheme-color synesthesia wasn't a skill or talent, no matter how much she wished it was at times.
    • 2018, Edward M. Hubbard, Julia Simner, editors, The Oxford Handbook of Synesthesia[4], Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 165, →ISBN:
      In this chapter, we explore how grapheme-color synesthesia might be expressed in second languages.
    • 2019, Jan Chromý with Marianna Borůvková, Lucie Malá, and Tereza Sudzinová, “Long-term versus short-term consistency in the grapheme-colour synaesthesia: Grapheme-colour pairings can change in adulthood”, in Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics[5], volume 81, page 1810:
      There were eight participants [] whose number of grapheme-colour pairings differed between the rounds.