mw. O. (Olympia) Colizoli MSc
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Faculteit der Maatschappij- en Gedragswetenschappen
Programmagroep: Brain & Cognition
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Weesperplein
4
1018 XA Amsterdam
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o.colizoli@uva.nl
T: 0205256947
T: 0205256921
In December 2014, I became a post-doctoral researcher in the lab of Dr. Tobias Donner. The topic of this project is neuromodulation of perceptual decision making. This research is funded by the Human Brain Project.
Pavlov: Synesthesie
We zijn op TV!
Serie portretten door de ogen van de wetenschap. Bekende
Nederlanders stellen een vraag aan de wetenschap. -Paul
Rabbering is 3FM-dj. Hij is synestheet: zintuigen lopen bij hem
door elkaar. Hoe zit dat in zijn hoofd?
Published!
Pseudo-synesthesia through reading bookswith colored
letters. PLoS One, 2012
Open Access Journal!
We are very pleased to finally see the results in print. If
anyone has questions about the materials used, please email
me.
O.Colizoli@uva.nl
A chat over synesthesia, neuroscience and ethics
Lidell Simpson interviewed me at the University of Amsterdam Feb 27, 2012.
Synesthesia
Synesthesia, in general, is a huge area of interest for me.
To one synesthetic person, middle C when played on a violin is dark red and
smells like baked bread. Synesthesia is a rare condition in which a stimulus
from one modality automatically triggers unusual sensations in the same and/or
other modalities. Neuroimaging and behavioral studies have repeatedly confirmed
synesthesia as being a real phenomenon, in contrast to mere associations or
vivid mental imagery. There are many different types of synesthesia, most of
which involve sensory perceptions, but there are also more conceptual or
abstract forms of it. The subjective reports from synesthetes themselves in
combination with recent technological advances (fMRI, DTI, VBM, EEG, TMS)
provide cognitive scientists with an amazing opportunity to understand how a
phenomenological experience arises out of a certain pattern of connectivity
within the brain.
If you are synesthetic or would just like more information about
synesthesia, please do not hesitate to contact me - my door is always open!
Check out the NEWS tab for stories about synesthesia research at the UvA!
Synesthesie Testen en Vragenlijsten
We zijn op zoek naar synestheten in Nederland... de nieuwe UvA synesthesie website is nu klaar!
Are you synesthetic?
Yes? No? Not sure?
There is an online testing service developed by Dr.
Eagleman's lab in Houston, TX. These tests begin with a
questionnaire about your experiences, and offer 7 different
types of tests (mostly color related). In the end you will get
your score, and we will also be able to see if you are
synesthetic or not. (The time it takes depends on how
manytypes of synesthesia you mave have - it is possible to
log-in and log-out to complete the battery at different
times.)
Note: They may ask for the email address of a synesthesia
researcher - please use R.Rouw@uva.nl.
In case you are synesthetic or not, we are always looking for
motivated participants for our research at the UvA. We
currently have several studies going on, including reading in
color, andwe are now looking for family members of
synesthetes.
Als je het liever in het Nederlands wil doen, kunnen wij je
Nederlandstalige vragenlijsten sturen.
Reflectionist Photography
Marcia Smilack
" I hear with my eyes and see withmyears."
Several of Marcia's pictures are on display during the
Synesthesia Prada Willy exhibit . Marcia is
one of my favorite artists, capturing moments in time that just
make so much sense when you see them, but would otherwise go
totally unnoticed by me. Thank you, Marcia, for being such an
inspiration.
"The way I taught myself photography is to shoot when I hear a
chord of color, which is one of my Synesthetic responses to
what I see. I knew nothing about photographyat the time so
decided to just trust what I hear in my mind's eye. I use my
Synesthetic responses as reliable signals that tell me when to
take a picture -- at the moment that the color I am staringat
createsthe sound of cello, for example, which for me is not a
metaphor but rather the way I perceive the world. The name for
this phenomenon is Synesthesia, but I was twenty-five
years old before I heard that word or understood that everyone
does not perceive the world as I do." Marcia Smilack
My Synesthetic Library
Carrie C. Firman
Interactive and illustrative synesthesia using new media
This is one of my favorite websites - make sure to check out
'My Synesthetic Library' for an illustration of Carrie's
ownsound->shape synesthesia.
"My current body of work encourages its participants to
reconsider perception as an entirely unique phenomenon.
Understanding that the simplest noise means different things to
someone else is key for a peaceful, equal community. Often
inspired by studying and experiencing synesthesia (the
involuntary crossing of the senses), my projects begin with a
vision that I press toward unrelentingly." Carrie C. Firman
The Shape of Sounds
Timothy B Layden
"The Shape of Sounds is a series of sound and visual art
developed by synesthetic artist Timothy B Layden. The work
explores how the invisible world of sound can manifest itself
visually through an overlapping of the senses." Timothy B.
Layden
Simply amazing...
Kaitlyn Maria Filippini
A classical/rock violinist, artist, composer, arranger, and
entrepreneur of the music performance business Eloquent
Acoustics.
Kaitlyn is also a synesthete (multiple forms).
SYNAESTHETIC
Caitlin Gianniny
A wonderful illustration of Caitlin's grapheme-color
synaesthesia (one of the most common forms of synesthesia, and
definitely the most studied type).
"Synaesthetic experiences are completely unseen by anyone
except the person perceiving them,but make up a normal part of
daily life for synesthetes. By finding visual ways of
communicating the experience of synaesthesia, I am looking to
open up common ideas of perception and memory encouraging
people to see the multiplicity of experience." Caitlin
Gianniny
SynesthesiaVisualization
Cassidy Curtis
An interactive illustration of
grapheme-colorsynesthesia.
Try it yourself! And check out the link "What is
synesthesia?"
Synesthetics
Cretien van Campen
Synesthesie in kunst en wetenschap - Nederlandse
informatiepagina over synesthesie
(Synesthesia in art and science - Information in Dutch about
synesthesia)
Cretien van Campen has written several books:
Gekleurd Verleden
The Hidden Sense
Tussen Zinnen
Check out his website, and make sure to click on the
"Synesthesia in art and science" link!
Sensequence
Angela Meder & Andreas Mengel
Upload your own synesthetic experiences and check out how
other people experience days, weeks, months, numbers and
letters - do they have colors? Are the colors like your
own?
Click on "Gallery"!
Sean Day
Co-founder of the American Synesthesia Association
His website has TONS of information on synesthesia. Be sure to check it out! He
also has many links to other synesthesia websites...and a list of famous
synesthetes!
Sean Day was interviewed about his own synesthesia (video link below).
An Eyeful of Sound
Samantha Moore
"It's about audio-visual synaesthesia and I collaborated with Dr Jamie Ward (a
neuro-psychologist) and several people with synaesthesia to try and make a film
about what it's like to have this condition."
It took almost 3 years to finish!
The Center of Our Minds (TED lecture)
Vilayanur Ramachandran
Ramachandran is a pioneer of the neuroscience of synesthesia
and one of the most famous and successful neuroscientists in
the world today.
"Brain researcher Vilayanur Ramachandran talks about how brain
damage can reveal the connection between the internal
structures of the brain and the corresponding functions of the
mind. He discusses three specific syndromes: phantom limb pain,
synesthesia (when people hear coloror smell sounds), and the
Capgras delusion, when brain-damaged people believe their
closest friends and family have been replaced with
imposters."
This is Krause
Krause is a Dutch musician and artist. She tastes most words
and many sounds. I am also a big fan of her music!
Check out the Pavlov TV program we were all on with guest Paul
Rabbering, where we try and unlock the mystery of the
synesthetic brain!
http://www.uitzendinggemist.nl/afleveringen/1291827
Dancing Lights by Lidell Simpson
"A synesthesia inspired music/video incorporating the sounds
I hear with my vision to sound synesthesia. This video made the
top 20 in the MuVi3 visual music competition hosted by the
Fundación Internacional Artecittà, Granada Spain"
Great job, Lidell!!
If you want to know more about Lidell's synesthesia, read the
interview "The Sound of Silence" with Lidell by Maureen
Seaberg.
Dianaband: ring ring rain
A sound wall! This is a great example of synesthetic
art: " If you reach into the rain, the rain
forms droplets upon our palms. If we try to touch them, they
are absorbed or seemingly run away. Have we ever really touched
falling rain drops before? Our imagination of the world tends
to be subject to visual experiences. Water drops are embossed
on moassive sheets of paper. The paper visualizes a rainy
environment and gives us a chance to touch water drops and
also to let you listen attentivley to rainfall. "
Touch + Motion + Sound = more than the sum of its parts!
TED... Neil Harbisson: I listen to color
Another GREAT TED talk about merging the mind and
technology!
Artist Neil Harbisson was born completely color blind, but
these days a device attached to his head turns color into
audible frequencies. Instead of seeing a world in grayscale,
Harbisson can hear a symphony of color -- and yes, even
listen to faces and paintings.
Got an interesting link?
Please let me know, and I'll add it to the list!!
Background
Olympia Colizoli, PhD
Background
I was born and raised in Shaker Heights, OH. As a high-school student, a keen interest in astronomy got me an internship at NASA Glenn Research Center, where I worked during holidays for 2 years with my mentor Dr. Robert Romanofsky in microwave engineering.
I have a B.Sc. in mathematics and philosophy ( Cum Laude ) from Tulane University of New Orleans, Louisiana. I began as a biomedical engineering student. However, I soon realized that I had too much passion for philosophy, art and traveling (things that an engineering schedule did not permit time for!). The biggest influence during my bachelor education has been Dr. Radu Bogdan, who was pioneering cognitive science at Tulane.
From 2005 to 2006, I lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico and worked for Dr. Tony C. Smith at a physical chemistry company that specializes in the repair and rebuilding of high-tech vacuum and optical equipment.
In 2008, I graduated from the Research Master of Cognitive Science at the University of Amsterdam, in the Brain and Behavior track ( Cum Laude ). The Master has since been renamed Brain and Cognitive Sciences (Cognitive Neuroscience track). During the master, I was awarded the prestigious Dutch Huygens Scholarship (HSP) from the Nuffic organization in 2007-2008.
On March 18th, 2014, I defended my PhD thesis entitled: Individual Differences in Visual Perception and Memory. (Supervisors: Prof.dr. Jaap M.J. Murre and Dr. Romke Rouw)
I am very happy to be in Amsterdam and am extremely grateful to be able to continue my research in the Brain and Cognition Department of the UvA.
2014
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2014). Defining (trained) grapheme-color synesthesia. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, 368. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00368[go to publisher's site]
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2014). Training synesthetic letter-color associations by reading in color. Journal of Visualized Experiments, 84, e50893. doi: 10.3791/50893
2013
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2013). A taste for words and sounds: a case of lexical-gustatory and sound-gustatory synesthesia. Frontiers in Psychology, 4, 775. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00775
2012
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2012). Pseudo-synesthesia through reading books with colored letters. PLoS One, 7 (6):e39799. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0039799[go to publisher's site]
2011
- R. Rouw, H.S. Scholte & O. Colizoli (2011). Brain areas involved in synaesthesia: a review. Journal of Neuropsychology, 5 (2), 214-242. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-6653.2011.02006.x
2014
- O. Colizoli (2014). BBC Future - Can synaesthesia be learnt? (column). (available: 11 jun 2014).
2012
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2012, July 12). En de wereld kleurt mee
- O. Colizoli (interview) (2012, Sep 27). Paul Rabbering en Synesthesie []. In Pavlov.
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2012, July 17). Teach yourself to see the letter 'k' in purple. MSNBC's The Body Odd
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2012, July 06). Can You Teach Yourself Synesthesia? The Atlantic
- O. Colizoli, J.M.J. Murre & R. Rouw (2012, July 06). Can Synesthesia Be Learned? The Wall Street Journal
2010
- O. Colizoli (2010, July 12). Can you teach yourself synaesthesia? New Scientist
2014
- O. Colizoli (2014, March 18). Individual differences in visual perception and memory. Universiteit van Amsterdam (198 pag.). Supervisor(s): prof.dr. J.M.J. Murre & dr. R. Rouw.
Andere
- R. Rouw, O. Colizoli & J.M.J. Murre (2014). The Adaptive Brain: Recent Advances in Cognitive Neuroscience.
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