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Definition of Colored hearing
1. Noun. A form of chromesthesia in which experiences of color accompany auditory stimuli.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Colored Hearing
Literary usage of Colored hearing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1900)
"No trace of colored hearing can be found in the other members of the family. ...
After this experience colored hearing, especially with emotionally stirring ..."
2. The Popular Science Monthly (1894)
"However this be, children's colored hearing is worth noting ... It seems reasonable
to suppose that colored hearing and other allied phenomena, ..."
3. Elementary Psychology: A Text-book for Normal Schools and for Teachers by Nathan Albert Harvey (1914)
"The significance of the phenomenon of colored hearing for the theory of perception
depends upon the fact that it shows that different brain centers are ..."
4. Physiological Psychology by Nathan Albert Harvey (1911)
"This is the phenomenon of colored audition, or colored hearing, ... We may suppose
in case of colored hearing that when the letter O, for example, ..."
5. An Introduction to Psychology by Mary Whiton Calkins, ( (1914)
"colored hearing consists in the regular sequence of a consciousness of some
particular color upon the consciousness of a letter, a name, or a musical tone. ..."
6. Archives of Otology (1905)
"The article begins with a description of the development of the theory of colored
hearing and the citation of old histories. ..."