Passage 1
Doesn’t That Sound Terribly Yellow to You? “I can’t say. I’m colour blind”, was my flat-mate’s response. And that was that for another twenty odd years, when by chance I came across an article in a newspaper on research into synaesthesia at a London hospital. At last, I understood my interpretation of the world through colour.
Synaesthesia is the subjective sensation of a sense other than the one being stimulated. For example, the sight of a word may evoke sensations of colour or the sound of music may also have a similar effect, as my taste. Or, to put it simply, synaesthetes, i.e. people with synaesthesia, have their senses held together, so that they experience several senses simultaneously.
To those not already aware of it, synaesthesia seems a new phenomenon. Yet, it is far from new. In 1690, John Locke, the philosopher, wrote of a blind man with synaesthetic capabilities. The first reference in the medical field was in 1710, by Thomas Woodhouse, an English ophthalmologist. In his Theory of Colour, the German writer, Goethe, talked about colour and the senses. The poet, Arthur Rimbaud, wrote about synaesthesia in his 1871 poem Voyelles, as did another French poet Baudelaire, in Correspondence. So, synaesthesia has a respectable history.
Synaesthesia is understandably met with a certain degree of skepticism, since it is something beyond the comprehension of the vast majority of people. Son et lumpier shows in the 19th century were an attempt at combining the senses in a public display, but such displays were not capable of conveying the sensations experienced by involuntary synaesthesia, as the ability which a synaesthete’s experience is called. There has been a number of well-documented synaesthetes. Alexander Scribing, the Russian composer(1871-1915), tried to express his own synaesthetic abilities in his symphony Prometheus, the Poem of Fire(1992). And another Russian, Rimsky-Korsakov, noted the colour associations musical keys possessed. For example, Scriabin saw C major as red, while to Rimsky-Korsakov it was white. Arthur Bliss, an Enclitic composer, based his A Colour Symphony in 1922 on the concept of synaesthesia. He did not claim to be a synaesthete; his colour choices were arbitrary and the project was an intellectual exercise.
In the field of the visual arts, probably the best-known artist with synaesthetic capabilities is the Russian artist, Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944), credited with being the founder of abstract painting. It is said he experienced “sensory fusion” at a performance of Wagner’s Lohengrin, with the music producing colors before his eyes. He did not see colours solely in terms of objects, but associated them with sounds. He even composed an opera, Der Gelbe Klang (The Yellow Sound), which was a mixture of colour, light, dance and sound.
For many people with synaesthesia, knowing that what they have been experiencing has both a name and a history and that they are among a number of notable sufferers is a revelation. Initially, they often feel that there is something wrong psychologically or mentally, or that everyone feels that way. Then they realise with a thud that other people do not. Suppression is an option, but unwittingly some people have managed to make use of the ability to their advantage. While the condition of synaesthesia may hamper many people because of its disorienting effects, it can also open up a range of new skills. It is not unusual for people who have synaesthesia to be creative and imaginative. As many studies have shown, memory is based to some extent on association. Synaesthetes find they are able to remember certain things with great ease. The person who associates the shape is able to remember a longer sequence of words; and the same goes for other areas where memory needs to be used.
But this condition like all gifts, has its drawbacks. Some people see words as colours; others even individual letters and syllables, so that a word becomes a kaleidoscope of colour. Beautiful though such a reading experience may be, synaesthesia can cause problems with both reading and writing. Reading can take longer, because one has to wade through all the colours, as well as the words! And, because the colour sequences as well as the words have to fit together, writing is then equally difficult.
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage 3?
In boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
1. Newspaper articles and TV news reports about synaesthesia are appearing with monotonous regularity nowadays.
2. Synaesthetes experience several senses at the same time.
3. Synaesthesia is a new phenomenon.
4. Early description of synaesthesia can be traced back to the 17th century.
5. It is strange that many people are sceptical about synaesthesia.
Sound is audible to human beings only if the frequency is______.
When configuring surround sound systems, speaker delay is used to compensate for speaker().
When approaching Block Island Sound from Long Island Sound,you will enter waters governed by the International Rules of the Road when you().
A knocking sound from one cylinder of an operating air compressor indicates ().
The children()at the sound of the terrorists' guns.
As the plane flew off towards the mountains in the distance the sound of its engines gradually ______.
In modern fathometers the sonic or ultrasonic sound waves are produced electrically by means of a(n)().