American Synesthesia Association
The American Synesthesia Association (ASA) is a not-for-profit[1] academic and public society whose mission is to foster and promote the education and the advancement of knowledge of the phenomena of synesthesia, a neurological condition in which stimulation in one sensory modality leads to experiences in a second, unstimulated modality. The ASA attempts to promote and provide a means for the people who experience and/or study synesthesia to be in contact with each other. As part of its educational mission, the ASA provides information to scientists, health professionals, academicians, researchers, artists, writers, musicians, lay persons and people who experience synesthesia.
Membership
[edit]The society currently includes about 200 members. Membership is open to anyone interested in the study of synesthesia, who experiences synesthesia, or who uses synesthesia in their art or published works. As public awareness of synesthesia has grown, the number of members has increased.
History
[edit]The American Synesthesia Association was created in 1995 by Carol Steen and Patricia Lynne Duffy after discovering, through correspondence with Simon Baron-Cohen, that there were other people in the New York metropolitan area who experienced synesthesia. The ASA was born out of a desire to meet other synesthetes, and to improve communication between synesthetes and researchers.
In 2000, the ASA was incorporated and received provisional status, 501(c)(3) in 2001. In 2005, the ASA received permanent 501(c)(3) status, and is now a Public Charity under the IRS tax code.
The Board Members of the ASA are Sean A. Day, Peter Grossenbacher, emeritus, Lawrence E. Marks, Daphne Maurer, and Carol Steen.
Meetings
[edit]As of 2013, the ASA has held ten major conferences, with attendees from around the world, but mostly from the United States and Europe. The first meeting of the ASA was held at Princeton University in 2001 with the attendance of numerous synesthesia researchers including Larry Marks, Vilayanur S. Ramachandran, Peter Grossenbacher, and artists and authors including Patricia Lynne Duffy and Natasha Lvovich. This meeting was featured in the popular press, including Time magazine[2] and other media outlets.[3] The first conference also became the subject of a documentary video. Since 2002, the ASA has instituted a keynote speaker, who gives an hour long lecture linking synesthesia with other domains of research. In 2011, the University of California, San Diego became the first location to host the ASA annual meeting twice (2002, 2011).
Meeting | Location | Dates | Presentations | Keynote Speaker |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Princeton University | May 19, 2001 | 10[4] | None |
2nd | University of California, San Diego | May 17–19, 2002 | 15[5] | Richard Cytowic |
3rd | Rockefeller University | May 2–4, 2003 | 18[6] | Lawrence Marks and Mriganka Sur |
4th | University of California, Berkeley | November 5–7, 2004 | 20[7] | Daphne Maurer |
5th | UT Health Science Center | October 28–30, 2005 | 17[8] | Lynn C. Robertson |
6th | University of South Florida St. Petersburg | January 26–28, 2007 | 21[9] | Mike Dixon |
7th | McMaster University | September 26 – 28, 2008 | 27[10] | Jamie Ward |
8th | Vanderbilt University | October 1–3, 2010 | 18[11] | Julia Simner |
9th | University of California, San Diego | October 14 – 16, 2011 | 20[12] | Edward Hubbard |
10th | OCAD University | May 31 - June 2, 2013 | 23[13] | Noam Sagiv |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ 501(c)(3)
- ^ Ah, the Blue Smell of It! in Time Magazine by Unmesh Kher Sunday, May. 13, 2001, accessed Sept. 30, 2010
- ^ They See Where Others Hear / To a synesthete, making sense is in eye, ear, nose of beholder in SFGate by Keay Davidson, March 29, 2001 accessed Sept. 30, 2010
- ^ Princeton ASA Program
- ^ UCSD 2002 ASA Program
- ^ Rockefeller ASA Program
- ^ Berkeley ASA Program
- ^ UT ASA Program
- ^ USF ASA Program
- ^ McMaster ASA Program
- ^ Vanderbilt ASA Program
- ^ UCSD 2011 ASA Program
- ^ OCAD 2013 ASA Program