In brief...
In general, the types of synesthesia with a non-visual concurrent (olfactory, gustatory, tactile, etc.) are much less common than those with a concurrent of colour.
No specific type/subtype/manifestation of synesthesia can be called “the
rarest type” because there are so
many that only a few people have (and it’s impossible to calculate exactly how
many people have them), and there are also types that logically exist but have
never been reported by anyone.
Also, there is no universal system for determining what actually constitutes “a type of synesthesia”.
What might some candidates be for a supposedly "rarest type"?
Here are some types or sub-types
that are very uncommon (with links to the page containing information on them
and reports by people who have them):
Grapheme-smell/taste (each letter
and/or number has a smell or taste. This type shouldn’t be confused with
lexical-gustatory synesthesia, which is word-taste and is much more common as probably
around 3% or more of synesthetes have it. Lexical-olfactory,
where words have smells, is rarer than lexical-gustatory.)
Tactile-olfactory and
tactile-gustatory (on touching different surfaces, the synesthete consistently
perceives a particular smell or taste)
Perceived emotion-touch sensations
(the perception of different emotions in other people creates a specific,
consistent tactile sensation in a particular part of the body)
Conceptual-auditory synesthesia is a very uncommon type, and an excellent example of a very rare or perhaps unique manifestation is hairstyles-sound.
However, we cannot really say that
the above types of synesthesia are the least common, as cases have been
described and confirmed.
The ones that really would be the rarest are those
for which no case has ever been reported. Some
examples of types that probably exist but which as far as I know no-one has reported yet are:
Kinetics-smell and kinetics-taste (different movements of one’s own body create the consistent perception of a smell or taste) (... but take a look at the comment of June 13, 2024 below to see a very interesting description of just this!)
Time units (such as days or months)-tactile sensations or pain-texture could be some other unreported types.
A problem with calculating the
rarest types: the sample size
It is difficult to estimate the
frequency of the most uncommon types of synesthesia because not enough people
have them to provide a sufficiently sized sample population for testing. Quite
reliable prevalence figures exist for the more common types of synesthesia,
because rigorous scientific methods have been used to assess many hundreds of
people after verifying the genuineness of their synesthetic experiences using
techniques such as the Battery Test. But for
the more uncommon types the reliable samples are very small, and in the case of
the very rare types they are practically zero and there are simply no figures
available: all we can do is guess.
But what does a “type of
synesthesia” consist of anyway?
One of the problems in attempting
to define what the rarest synesthesia types might be is in classifying what
actually constitutes a “type of synesthesia”: how should we subdivide? Breaking
them down into main groups – auditory-visual, olfactory-tactile, and so on – is
not the same as finely subdividing them by particular manifestations into types
like “decades-to-colour”, “weekday personification”, “morpheme-colour” or
“novels I’ve read-spatial location”.
If we subdivide by overarching groups, the most common synesthesias would be those that have a colour perception as their concurrent, and the least common would probably be those with a tactile or olfactory/gustatory concurrent (see footnote 2).
A large-scale research study by Novich, Cheng and Eagleman, Is synaesthesia one condition or many? A large-scale analysis reveals subgroups (2011) proposed 5 clusters of synesthesia types:
- coloured sequences (month-colour, grapheme-colour, etc.)- coloured sensations (pain-colour, for example)
- music-colour
- synesthesias with non-visual concurrents (evoking smell, sound, touch, taste, etc.)
- spatial sequences
The least common cluster would be non-visual concurrents. Talking
about clusters rather than specific types, subtypes or manifestations of
synesthesia is a much more practical way of trying to determine what might be
the “least common synesthesia type”.
On this page of the Tree: List of types of synesthesia by prevalence, the furthest column to the right shows a list of the types and manifestations of synesthesia that could be the rarest, with an incidence of less than 1% among the synesthete population. As you can see, they are very numerous: much more numerous than the more common types. I’d also like to clarify that this is only a rough approximation to the real situation, as apart from there being no reliable figures available for these types some of them might also be more widespread than was formerly believed (and they might jump to a higher column when more cases are reported).
Weak synesthesias
It should be borne in mind that
many synesthetes have only very mild manifestations of a particular type of
synesthesia or have simply not focused on it enough to realise that they have
it, and this also influences the number of reports and figures available to
researchers. In the past, as a result of this effect and the fact that
synesthesia was hardly talked about (and up to about 1990 or 2000 scientific
knowledge on the subject was much more limited), it was generally believed to
be an extremely rare phenomenon, although it is now known that this is not the
case, with a commonly accepted figure of almost 4% of synesthetes in the
population. When a type of synesthesia begins
to be discussed, it is commented in the dedicated groups and forums in the
social networks and more people appear who can talk about their own experiences
with it. But the rarer types of synesthesia
are less talked about, precisely because they are rarer… and logically it is
more difficult for them to come to light than in the case of more common types.
Synesthetic concurrents: mixed or
on the rocks?
Another effect that complicates the
possibility of counting cases of certain types of synesthesia is that some
concurrents tend to occur jointly with others, making them more difficult to
classify. Grapheme-temperature synesthesia is an example of this: for
many synesthetes, temperature is probably an integral part of their grapheme-colour
synesthesia, but it wouldn’t occur to them to say that they have
grapheme-temperature synesthesia. If we only
count the people who experience a temperature concurrent without an associated
colour perception we would have one figure, while if we counted all
grapheme-colour synesthetes with this additional temperature perception we
would have another, much higher, one. Which
would be correct?
Who has the rarest forms of
synesthesia?
Whatever the case, it is
interesting to note that the most uncommon types of synesthesia tend to be
experienced by people with a very high “synesthetic disposition”. This
means that they have many different types, often strongly expressed. This phenomenon tends to occur more frequently in people on
the autism spectrum, although not exclusively so. If someone has only one subtype or manifestation of
synesthesia, or very few, it is very unlikely that this type would be precisely
one of the rarest. If that seems to be the
case, the phenomenon they are experiencing is probably not a type of
synesthesia.
This page last updated: 5 March 2026
This Tree page was first published on 13 July 2022


"No specific type/subtype/manifestation of synesthesia can be called “the rarest type” because there are so many that only a few people have (and it’s impossible to calculate exactly how many people have them), and there are also types that logically exist but have never been reported by anyone."
ReplyDeleteThis is a wow and mindblowing moment.
Especially the "logical types which exist but were never reported'.
1 person finds another and they find another.
Adelaide
Thank you for your comments!
Deletein fact, until very recently lexico-gustatory Synesthesia was indeed one of the forms that was believed to exist theoretically, but had not been found. It took a lot of digging to find a couple of people who reported experiences that fit that category, and if I’m not mistaken, that discovery has only happened within the last 20 years or so. Prior to that it was so uncommon as to be believed not to exist at all really. Then, when there was evidence of it, it was long postulated that the only goose sensations that could be produced this way were very simple and basic, such as salty, sweet, etc. In Richard Cytowic’s first book, The man who tasted Shapes, you see this idea, clearly articulated. That was before more research was done., It has been very recent that anyone has realized it could be more complicated. However, the fact that it has an ‘ideasthesia’ Component that makes it particularly subjective and apparently highly interesting to people Has made it ripe For easy appropriation by people who have seen these things on TikTok or something and just want to claim it as an identity. Particularly because there were a couple of people a few years ago, who were very active on social media, charging others to tell them what their names tasted like and such. A bit of digging revealed that these people were at least in part regurgitating (ie plagiarizing) earlier writings of others who expressed that had this particular synthesthetic experience before it went mainstream. My point here is that the apparent inflation in the percentage may well be driven by this kind of thing rather than actual research, in the same way that everyone these days believes they know their IQ because they can take an IQ test online. The chatter of those who have fixed up upon this as a trend Naturally influences AI Which is then relied upon when perhaps it should not be. Synesthesia Is fascinating but not earth-shattering; However, the research would do us all a lot more good if we kept it in perspective and stopped, allowing social media chatter, and appropriation to drive our understanding.
DeleteI am a lexico- gustatory synesthete in my 50's, with a definite grapheme-flavor component. I participated in early research, am cited in Dr. Cytowic's writings, and have written casually about it on social media in the distant past. I recently discovered some of my specific experiences ( described years ago in response to 'what does my name taste like' Quora queries) duplicated with suspicious specificity and eagerness by an aspiring tiktok ' synesthetic personality'. I can only assume I am not the only one whose genuine experiences have been plagiarized in the name of something other than science. The sad thing is that this type of thing really skews and complicates research, and may very well be interfering with actual numbers. It is so subjective, it's easy for people to claim knowing it can't really be measured unless in a really formal setting. Especially because it would seem many people do have synesthesia to some degree but it's just very low level. It's a fascinating subject and really difficult to get a grip on when people are just embellishing things all over the place.
ReplyDeleteHey, I might actually have one of those that you said are supposedly unreported! I remember telling my dad when I was younger how distressed I was (I have sensory issues (and likely autism spectrum disorder, but that's a 1000+ dollar diagnosis with a total 10 hour drive there and back, so I'm just gonna keep things speculatory for a while) that I didn't know how to manage back then, so even though it's not a necessarily *strong* flavor, it was pretty upsetting for little 6 year old Anonymous) because I couldn't get my body to stop tasting whenever I moved it. (The only one I cared for was bending my left knee, it tastes weirdly close to a brand of french vanilla frozen yogurt, which as far as I'm aware I wouldn't try until at least like 11) I was told I was silly and that it wasn't really happening so I've just kind of ignored it and assumed I was making it up until this point, and I figured it couldn't be synesthesia because I already experience that another way (Color-taste, oddly enough becomes stronger if I (or another object, in a transhumanistic sense) touch it, but not from the texture? To be honest, I'm not even sure if THATS really synesthesia). It took reading this post to know you could have it more than one way! Heck, I didn't even realize that moving your own body could be a trigger! I'm not 100% sure as, like I stated before, I've been vehemently dismissing it up until this point and thus haven't really examined it, but I figured with you keeping such a collection of this kind of information, you'd like to hear about even a tentative report :) If I can remember, I'll get back to you on that. Thank you so much for this article!
ReplyDelete