# Exploring the link between synesthesia and lucid dreaming through perceptual presence

**Authors:** Eiko Matsuda, Eiko Matsuda

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1733841 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-02-26

## TL;DR

This study explores how synesthesia and lucid dreaming are connected through shared traits like enhanced perception and imagination.

## Contribution

The study identifies distinct synesthesia subtypes and their specific effects on lucid dreaming traits, linking them to cognitive mechanisms like counterfactual-richness.

## Key findings

- Perceptual synesthesia types (Visualized sensation, Spatial Sequence) are strongly linked to increased lucid dreaming control and positive emotions.
- Conceptual synesthesia types (Language-Color, OLP) interact negatively with personality traits like Openness and Extraversion, reducing lucid dreaming frequency.
- The findings suggest synesthesia and lucid dreaming are interconnected through enhanced perceptual presence and sensorimotor imagination.

## Abstract

This study investigates links between synesthesia and lucid dreaming via perceptual presence and counterfactual-richness (abundant possible sensorimotor contingencies). We hypothesized that synesthetes would report more frequent lucid dreams because enhanced counterfactual-richness facilitates dream control and clarity. We surveyed 616 adults using a synesthesia self-report, the Lucidity and Consciousness in Dreams scale (LuCiD), and the Big-5 inventory (TIPI-J). Cluster analysis validated four synesthesia subtypes– Language-Color, Ordinal Linguistic Personification (OLP), Spatial Sequence, and Visualized sensation–consistent with prior work. Regression analyses revealed type-specific effects on lucid dreaming: perceptual synesthesia (Visualized sensation, Spatial Sequence) robustly promoted lucid-dream facets–especially control, and also insight, dissociation, and positive emotion–whereas conceptual synesthesia (Language-Color, OLP) showed negative interactions with Openness and Extraversion, thereby attenuating lucid-dream experiences. Personality analyses further confirmed positive associations between lucid dreaming and Openness and Extraversion, aligning with previous literature. We interpret perceptual synesthesia as an expression of excessive counterfactual-richness that enhances perceptual presence and sensorimotor contingencies during dreaming. These findings both clarify qualitative differences within synesthetic experience and suggest a new direction for understanding synesthesia and lucid dreaming as interconnected cognitive phenomena.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** synesthesia (MESH:D000080311)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12979406/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12979406