It can also be called Hearing motion or Visually-induced auditory synesthesia
It can be called Kinetics-to-sound if it refers to hearing one’s own body movements
1. Hearing GIFs, animations and soundless videos
When is it not synesthesia?
An informal study carried out in 2017 via Twitter in by researcher Lisa DeBruine from Glasgow University (you can read an article about it here) received thousands of responses from readers and determined that around 70% of people were able to hear the skipping (and thumping) electricity pylon.
And when can it be considered synesthesia?
However,
there is a small percentage of people who consistently hear all kinds of GIFs,
including abstract forms in movement that cannot be associated with any
real-life sounds at all. It is possible that automatically and consistently
hearing this kind of GIFs is a type of synesthesia. Here’s an example:
2. Hearing the movements of the elements around us
“I watch my cat walk across the floor. His legs “schwoot” and his paws “top top” and his tail “hums” from side to side. Example 2: I am in yoga class, we are doing shoulder rolls. My neighbor’s motion sounds like like an industrial machine of some kind... “WoooOOO... woooOOO.” Most sounds are machine-like in fact.”
(Source: This post on the Synesthesia subReddit. 2020.)
3. Hearing your own body movements
When is it not synesthesia?
Some people
have auditory sensitivity to certain biological processes, such as their
heartbeat or the blood flowing through their veins. Some of them hear their
eyes blink or hear their neck when they turn their head. There are physical
causes for these phenomena that are not related to synesthesia.
And when can it be considered synesthesia?
Here are two descriptions written by people who hear silent body movements:
"For the longest time I’ve heard sounds to seeing and feeling movement. This is especially true for my own moving body but can be heard mentally watching other people or things move.
For
instance, if I take a step to grab a cup from a cupboard, I hear my leg, body,
arm and fingers as they twist extend and contract. Almost as if I was a robot
with rusty joints. And depending on the movement/speed/and limb it’s a
different pitch that rises and falls. As different parts are moving I hear them
simultaneously. (...)
I’ve always been a bit fascinated with dancers. Not sure exactly why. Maybe it’s because the sound of their movements matches the actual sound and it’s like a strange reverb effect where everything is in sync.”
(Source: This post and comment, since deleted, on Reddit/Synesthesia. 2020.)
“I can hear touch (...).
Well, "hear" in a sense. I can’t actually hear it as if the sound were playing in real life, but the sound plays in the back of my head. I knew about this my entire life, but I really started to think about it recently. For example, every time I touch one of my fingers to my thumb it plays a high or low pitch sound, depending on which finger. Almost like a piano. But it's more noticeable with movement. When I see something move but it makes no noise, my brain fills in the silence with a sound. Everything has its own sound, but it's usually not the sound it'd make if it wasn’t silent.”
(Source: This post on the Do I Have Synesthesia subReddit. 2021.)
Some links:
Here’s an interesting article on the “visually evoked auditory response” (VEAR) and the skipping and thumping electricity pylon phenomenon.
Concept-sound synesthesia
Another
type of synesthesia, much less common but possibly related, involves perceiving
sounds, pitches or musical notes in response to concepts that do not necessarily
move but which form part of a group, series or sequence. Some synesthetes report
auditory reactions to different shapes, time units, graphemes, colours, people or even hairstyles!
Go to the page on Concept-sound synesthesia
More cases / readers' comments: read all the comments on this article here
This page last updated: 27 May 2026

This is the closest I've seen to what I see... I'm a music student from various instruments and musical enviroments, and I see movement in music -when it's "well made/expressed"- closing my eyes. I see mostly circular patterns on all sides, and they change and move along with the music. When something "isn't right" in the song happens something close to a pause in it, or a stop if it doesn't "get right" soon enough.
ReplyDeleteI also get music composing itself on my mind most of the week, especially if I'm not mentally tired, and the times I closed my eyes and concetrated on expressing mentally that music some good patterns appeared!
I'm studying to become a director some day too, and I think this could help me a lot; But I need to understand it better first. That's why I'll just leave this comment to see if you could help me identify this, or at least know if it is actually a synesthesia!
Hi Jeremías, and sorry for the slightly late reply!
DeleteI think there are two possible explanations for what you are describing.
The first is that it might be a kind of auditory-visual synesthesia, timbre-shape perhaps (https://www.thesynesthesiatree.com/2021/03/timbre-colour-and-timbre-shape.html). As you mention that it seems closely linked to the song sounding "right" and you "mentally expressing" it, then rather than being strictly auditory-related it might have a connection to emotion as an inducer, although I think that's less probable. I think it's more likely to be auditory-visual synesthesia, and as it's fairly mild and not very invasive in your case you need to relax and focus in order to perceive the circular patterns, and if you are distracted (by the music not being right or by other things) then you lose your flow state and wouldn't be as sensitive to them.
The other possible thing that might be happening, rather than synesthesia, is hypnagogic visualisations, as you mention that it only happens when you close your eyes. Some people experience these and they appear visually in the form of bright, sparkling little lights or morphing shapes, only with closed eyes or in the dark, when the person is in an extremely relaxed state. This is normally at the moment between sleep and wakefulness, although for some people they can happen if music, for example, makes them rapidly enter a deep state of relaxation. If this is the explanation in your case, and not synesthesia, then the patterns you see would be physically visible to you behind your closed eyelids, and they would be very bright and sparkly, rather than more of a "feeling" or in the "mind's eye" as would probably be the case if you had mild synesthesia.