"Ticker
taping" consists of automatically visualising written words in the form of subtitles when hearing other people speak. It can also occur with one’s own
speech and/or with internal dialogue, i.e. verbal thinking.
The term “ticker tape” originally refers to the long thin strips of paper with information on the changing stock prices that were used at the New York Stock Exchange (and subsequently at others) up until the 1960s. Today an electronic version with a slimline screen is used to transmit this information, but it still rolls by in a way that is broadly similar to the visualisations of some ticker tape synesthetes. The words they see appear on a mental or visual “screen” in front of them as if they were captions for the words they are hearing or thinking, often travelling from right to left or vice versa. Others see their “subtitles” as static and they appear and fade out as the words are pronounced, and some see them as coming out of the mouth of the person speaking or hovering around their head. For some people with stronger forms of ticker tape, the words are actually physically seen projected in the air (this is the case of projector synesthetes), while others with weaker forms (associators) only see them in the mind’s eye.
Some aspects of ticker tape synesthesia:
· The words appear in a specific font – they might be in Arial or Times New Roman, for example. In other cases they can take the form of handwritten text or look like words being written in chalk on a blackboard, and there are even people who feel the sensation in their hands that they are writing or typing the text themselves, in a “proprioceptive” or “motor” variant of ticker tape.
· The way in which the words appear is consistent for each ticker taper, but the font, colour and other characteristics of the photisms can vary according to the type of voice of the person speaking, their accent, the emotion they put across, the volume, if they are singing rather than talking, etc.
· When ticker tape coexists with grapheme-colour or phoneme-colour synesthesia, the words visualised can have different colours or chromatic nuances.
· The words can appear visually with a short delay after being heard (a third of a second, half a second, for example) or not, depending on the ticker taper in question.
· People with strong ticker tape usually feel overwhelmed by the confused mass of words they see when many people are talking at the same time, finding themselves unable to “disconnect” or stop seeing the words.
· People with ticker tape often report being very good at spelling. Some of them can even spell words backwards amazingly quickly, although it seems that this skill also requires practice (and that there are no advantages of this kind for ticker tapers whose photisms fade quickly away rather than persisting in the air for a few seconds).
· They can also be particularly good at learning languages. However, they sometimes have more problems than the average person with understanding a new language when it is spoken, as they cannot “see” the words properly and get confused and blocked as there is no visible information to help them.
· Some ticker tapers report having learnt to read early in life, at 3 or 4 years of age for example (I am not aware of any studies carried out to determine whether this is so for all or most or just a few, but there might perhaps be a relationship).
· Possible variants that have been described are seeing ambient sounds as written or printed words in the air (the typical “Pow!” “Bam!” “Wham!” in comics), or seeing certain objects “labelled” with their corresponding name floating in space beside them.
Here
are some descriptions written by people with ticker tape synesthesia:
This person perceives the typical words rolling across a screen, but has a different experience on hearing individual words:
"When someone is speaking or if I’m thinking to myself, my brain runs captions across like the stock market does with stocks. Single words are seen in large bubble-like font, appearing and disappearing in similar fashion to a puff of smoke."
(Source: This post on the Synesthesia subReddit. 2020.)
For this second person, the subtitles tend to "float" rather than "roll", and they seem very real and are quite invasive, with specific colours and fonts depending on the type of speech heard:
"The words hang there in 3D space until I will them to fade away, or I leave the room and come back having forgotten what was said. My friends have once or twice caught me sidestepping non-existent floating subtitles in public spaces. Yelling is red and scraggly, British people are cursive, caligraphic font, usually black or white inked."
(Source: This post on the Synesthesia subReddit. 2018.)
This page last updated: 6 May 2026


My mother had it, but I've only quite recently (at the age of 74!) discovered that not every one sees words in their mind's eye when they hear them. Being a good speller helped me when I spent decades as an editor.
ReplyDeleteThe only trouble is that the display appears only in Roman letters. If I hear a Slavic language, the words don't appear in the Cyrillic alphabet.
I've always know that synesthesia runs on my mom side, but I had thought it had skipped me, as all of the kinds my relatives have described to me (time-space and grapheme-color) were nothing I had experienced. But today, watching a video about how synesthesia could develop, I had described to me something I didn't realize wasn't a universal experience. As long as I can remember, I have seen what people say as a scrolling line of Arial font text in my minds eye, as well as "seeing" words I say inside my mouth. I even see that typing blinking line thingy when I am figuring out what to say next!
ReplyDeleteWhen I have asked people if they see words flash in front of them when they hear them, they've looked at me like I was mentally unbalanced. Thank you for this!
ReplyDeleteI am fluent in American Sign Language and have subtitles for the signs people make as well as the words they speak. Like many others, I only recently learned that this is not normal. I often get irritated when someone says a word that I don’t know how to spell and then I have to look it up or ask them. I also am fond of big words and I love learning new ones. One thing that irritates me very much is when subtitles are not in time with the person speaking on a movie or show and when the subtitles are spelled wrong. My father also has ticker tape synesthesia and is very good at spelling and always has been. I also have mirror touch and number personification.
ReplyDeleteHi All, has anyone got acquired ticker tape? That is, you didn’t have it, then after some event you did have it? Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThis probably isn't the same thing at all, but I feel like it's somewhat related. I have a fear of people reading my mind (kinda embarrasing, but whatever) and a large part of that is because I imagine my thoughts being projected into a box above my head. It only really happens when I'm thinking 'bad' thoughts, otherwise my thoughts are inside my brain. Does this count as ticker tape, or is there another name for it?
ReplyDeleteThis sounds different from ticker taping and I don't think it would be considered as such. As to another name or explanation, maybe earlier in your life you practised the “container method” of stopping intrusive thoughts from bothering you, and you’ve retained the habit automatically since then? Or you devised your own method of rapidly “storing away” negative thoughts at some point, and you’ve continued doing that? I’m not knowledgeable about this particular subject but those are a couple of things that occur to me as a possible explanation. It might be something different of course!
Delete