Often
abbreviated to SSS
Other,
less-used, names for it are Sequence-spatial, Sequence-space and Visuo-spatial synesthesia
1. Calendar synesthesia (time-space synesthesia)
2. Number form synesthesia
3. Letter form (or alphabet form) synesthesia
4. Spatial visualisation of other sequences (school subjects, books
of the Bible and signs of the zodiac are a few examples).
"Spatial sequencers" perceive the months, dates, numbers, letters or other elements in a
sequence in the physical space around them or in front of them. Apart
from spatial position, these elements may also have their own colour, texture
and shape. Projectors (a minority) see their sequences
literally outside their own body space, while associators see them
in the mind’s eye but not physically. Although the exact
spatial arrangement is different for each person, it is consistent and
tends to remain the same throughout their lifetime. The visual configuration
of the sequences can be relatively simple, highly complex or anything in between:
the elements might be on a horizontal, vertical or diagonal plane, in a ring or
spiralling out of sight, progressing from left to right or vice versa and
sometimes with many sudden or gradual changes of direction. Typically,
the subject’s viewpoint can vary and the perspective can shift when necessary, so
the synesthete feels that they are standing in front of the current month of
the year, for example, with the rest of the months positioned accordingly and
some of them even behind them and out of sight.
MAIN TYPES
OF SPATIAL SEQUENCE SYNESTHESIA:
(the title links
go to a description of each type, with examples)
More about spatial sequencing in synesthetes and non-synesthetes
Many non-synesthetes
experience something very similar to this, so should we consider that SSS isn’t
actually synesthesia? Or perhaps that there are many more synesthetes in the
population than we had previously thought?
It has been observed that spatial sequencing can be present in people who would not normally be considered synesthetes. It may even occur in much higher percentages of the general population than the 4% accepted today as being the total percentage of synesthetes: different studies have estimated that around 15%-29% of the general population might experience it to some degree. Research is still needed to accurately determine whether these types occur more strongly or differently in people we would normally consider synesthetes than in other individuals. Perhaps the occurrence of a similar phenomenon to SSS in non-synesthetes is merely a result of the SNARC effect (this stands for “spatial numerical association of response codes” and means that we all have a tendency to adapt our spatial reasoning to commonly accepted cultural conventions such as writing from left to right in the Western cultures and from right to left in some other alphabets, ordering the numbers from left to right or arranging the months from right to left or perhaps from top to bottom).
If you are interested in finding out more about this phenomenon, you could read this scientific study: The objectification of overlearned sequences: A new view of spatial sequence synesthesia (D. Eagleman, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA, 2009).
In this study, a large-scale characterisation of spatial sequence synesthesia was performed, comparing synesthetes and non-synesthetes. Here is an excerpt from some of its findings and information:
“There has been
an ongoing discussion about whether spatial sequences should qualify as a form
of synesthesia. At first glance, the objectification of sequences does not seem
to fit the definition of synesthesia as a sensory coupling; however, the fact
that the inducers are the same as the more wellstudied color synesthesia seems
to implicate it as a related phenomenon. In this case, the overlearned
sequences trigger an experience of objecthood, in the same way that experiences
of shape, texture, color, and illumination can also be triggered by sequences
(Eagleman and Goodale, 2009). Therefore it seems appropriate to classify the
automatic objectification of sequences as a form of synesthesia. (...)
One possibility is that the difference results from
individual differences in the vividness of the visual imagery, which is known
to vary widely in the population. Another, non-exclusive possibility for why a
subset of the population has vividly conscious access to sequential spatial
mappings is an inherited genetic component, as is thought to occur in colored
sequence synesthesia.
This page last updated: 8 April 2024
Hi - I just found out a Substacker - Jay Rollins - has this type of syn.
ReplyDeleteAdelaide
Wow... I feel dumb.. I got hit by a car when I was five and got brain trauma. Ever since then I've been able to see space, time is a little fuzzy as it's intertwined with space. But this explains everything from my eidetic memory, sound and pheromone residue etc etc.. but every night at about 8pm est earth is swamped by a strange green glow. Never finding any information on what it is.. or why some but not all street lamp posts have black and purple beams radiating upward and never changes with the angling of the perceived space. But the green fog is like ambient energy more like a light cloud..and seeing that it's not hallucinations... They have to be caused by something
ReplyDelete. But it's never a sound, number, symbols spoken words or tastes..
WOW I'm amazed at the colors for the Months, Almost matches how I see them.
ReplyDeletei have this for the year, week, day, time and other things like if you talk about a country, city etc its involuntary, not sure if I have any other type of synethesia, pretty sure my father was also synethetic
ReplyDeleteMe too!!!
DeleteI don't know if I'm synesthetic but I have the calendar one, like, all times, hours, days, weeks, months, etc. it's all 3D, and the numbers one appears as a downwards spiral, and all the numbers line up, like, I can rotate the spiral, and underneath 1 is 11, then 21, 31 etc. also letters. It's like a rope that starts ahead of me, and then I'm standing right next to N, and then the rope continues backwards.
ReplyDeleteI am 63, and found out a month ago that I have the Spacial Sequence Synesthesia. I had no idea not everyone thinks this way! That explains my freakish memory of dates and time. Lol
ReplyDeleteMy SSS goes all the way back to my first memories. Pretty interesting!
I'm completely blown away after knowing I've had this for years, but finally coming across this picture which actually perfectly describes how I 'see' things. SO hard to explain to others.
ReplyDeleteAppreciatte your blog post
ReplyDeleteI have a timeline one that has been with me as long as I can remember [deep into childhood, and I can remember lying in my pram as a baby]: I tried to draw a diagram of how I see the years of my life in space - at least in my head - and it only kind of represented it: when I look at it, it's just plain wrong as a gestalt, even though it is as close to externalising as I can get. It's like when I try to explain it to someone else, simply trying pushes the image further from my mind until I don't see it...
ReplyDeleteVery creatiive post
ReplyDelete