TheMindReport

Strawberry and rose odors shifted color choices, painting mood, and object selection

Two experiments suggest smells can bias what people paint, which colors they use, and what they pick to depict. In a new journal article, specific odors reliably lined up with specific colors and painting impressions. Strawberry odor tended to pull people toward warmer, lighter, more positive work, while rose odor leaned cooler in color associations. […]

Exploring the Colorful World of Synesthesia: How Attention Transforms Perception

Introduction Imagine reading a book and not only seeing the words but also experiencing a vibrant splash of colors, with each letter sparking a unique hue. This remarkable phenomenon is known as grapheme-color synesthesia, a condition where individuals naturally perceive specific letters or numbers to be in distinct colors. This intriguing neural occurrence leads us […]

See the World Anew: Understanding Mirror Symmetry in Autism

Introduction: Seeing the Forest and the Trees Imagine walking through a dense forest: do you first notice the rows of majestic trees, or do the intricate patterns of individual leaves catch your eye? For most, this process of perception might seem automatic and uniform. However, for individuals with autism, how they visually process the world […]