Result: Bouba, Kiki, and the Movement Between: Toward A Sensorimotor Hypothesis of Sound-Shape Cross-modal Correspondences

Title:
Bouba, Kiki, and the Movement Between: Toward A Sensorimotor Hypothesis of Sound-Shape Cross-modal Correspondences
Contributors:
Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone (INT), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Perception, Représentations, Image, Son, Musique (PRISM), Institute of Language, Communication and the Brain (ILCB), ANR-16-CONV-0002,ILCB,ILCB: Institute of Language Communication and the Brain(2016), ANR-24-CE38-4175,PSIND,Punk sound is not dead. Caractérisation musicologique, sonore et perceptive du punk via des approches qualitatives et data-driven(2024), ANR-23-PEIC-0002,HARMONIE,The challenges of creation, production and distribution in the digital era(2023)
Source:
17th International Symposium on Computer Music Multidisciplinary Research, Nov 2025, Londres, United Kingdom. ⟨10.5281/zenodo.17497860⟩
Publisher Information:
CCSD; Zenodo, 2025.
Publication Year:
2025
Collection:
collection:CNRS
collection:UNIV-AMU
collection:INT
collection:ILCB
collection:PRISM-AMU
collection:ANR
collection:NEUROMARSEILLE
collection:INCIAM
collection:PEPR_ICCARE
Subject Geographic:
Original Identifier:
HAL: hal-05352705
Document Type:
Conference conferenceObject<br />Conference papers
Language:
English
Relation:
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.5281/zenodo.17497860
DOI:
10.5281/zenodo.17497860
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
URL: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/
Accession Number:
edshal.hal.05352705v1
Database:
HAL

Further Information

This study investigates the role of implicit motor dynamics in shaping cross-modal correspondences that underlie the Bouba/Kiki effect. Building on the hypothesis of a shared amodal code linking movement, sound, and shape, we conducted two behavioural experiments in which participants associated non-words with either visual geometric shapes or friction sounds derived from hand-drawn movements. In both modalities, we observed systematic mappings consistent with the Bouba/Kiki pattern. Crucially, we manipulated the relative phase (RP) between the horizontal and vertical components of movement trajectories,a key parameter describing spatial coordination. Results reveal that RP significantly predicts participants’ judgments across modalities, forming a continuous perceptual gradient from "Kiki" (angular, phase ≈ 0/π) to "Bouba" (rounded, phase ≈ π/2). These findings suggest that perceptual judgments are modulated not solely by sensory features, but by an internal motor representation of the movement that could have generated the stimulus. These preliminary findings support the existence of a motor-based, amodal code that structures cross-modal correspondences.