Part 1: Origins of Synesthesia 1: Donielle Johnson, Carrie Allison, and Simon Baron-Cohen: The prevalence of synesthesia: The consistency revolution 2: Julian E. Asher and Duncan A. Carmichael: The genetics and inheritance of synaesthesia 3: Daphne Maurer, Laura C. Gibson, and Ferrinne Spector: Synesthesia in infants and very young children 4: Julia Simner and Edward M. Hubbard: Synesthesia in school-aged children 5: Peter Hancock: Synesthesia, alphabet books, and fridge magnets Part 2: Synesthesia, Language, and Numbers 6: Roi Cohen Kadosh and Avishai Henik: Numbers, synesthesia, and directionality 7: Clare Jonas and Michelle Jarick: Synesthesia, sequences, and space 8: Julia Simner: The 'rules' of synesthesia 9: Aleksandra Mroczko-Wasowicz and Danko Nikolic: Colored alphabets in bilingual synesthetes 10: Fiona N. Newell: Synesthesia, meaning, and multilingual speakers 11: Wan-Yu Hung: Synesthesia in non-alphabetic languages 12: Monika Sobczak-Edmans and Noam Sagiv: Synesthetic personification: The social world of graphemes Part 3: Attention and Perception 13: Tessa M. van Leeuwen: Individual differences in synesthesia 14: Anina N. Rich and Jason B. Mattingley: The role of attention in synesthesia 15: Chai-Youn Kim and Randolph Blake: Revisiting the perceptual reality of synesthetic color 16: Bryan D. Alvarez and Lynn C. Robertson: Synesthesia and binding 17: Tanja C. W. Nijboer and Bruno Laeng: Synesthesia, eye-movements, and pupillometry 18: Alicia Callejas and Juan Lupi an ez: Synesthesia, incongruence, and emotionality Part 4: Contemporary and Historical Approaches 19: Joerg Jewanski: Synesthesia in the nineteenth century: Scientific origins 20: Richard E. Cytowic: Synesthesia in the twentieth century: Synesthesia's renaissance 21: Christopher T. Lovelace: Synesthesia in the twenty-first century: Synesthesia's ascent 22: Christine Mohr: Synesthesia in space versus the 'mind's eye': How to ask the right questions 23: Markus Zedler and Marie Rehme: Synesthesia: A psychosocial approach Part 5: Neurological Basis of Synesthesia 24: Edward M. Hubbard: Synesthesia and functional imaging 25: Romke Rouw: Synesthesia, hyperconnectivity, and diffusion tensor imaging 26: Peter H. Weiss: Can gray matter studies inform theories of (grapheme-color) synesthesia? 27: Kevin J. Mitchell: Synesthesia and cortical connectivity: A neurodevelopmental perspective 28: Lutz Jancke: The timing of neurophysiological events in synaesthesia 29: Neil G. Muggleton and Elias Tsakanikos: The use of transcranial magnetic stimulation in the investigation of synesthesia 30: Michael J. Banissy: Synesthesia, mirror neurons, and mirror-touch Part 6: Costs and Benefits: Creativity, Memory, and Imagery 31: Catherine M. Mulvenna: Synesthesia and creativity 32: Cretien van Campen: Synesthesia in the visual arts 33: Patricia Lynne Duffy: Synesthesia in literature 34: Carol Steen and Greta Berman: Synesthesia and the artistic process 35: Beat Meier and Nicolas Rothen: Synesthesia and memory 36: Mary Jane Spiller and Ashok S. Jansari: Synesthesia and savantism 37: Mark C. Price: Synesthesia, imagery, and performance Part 7: Cross-Modality in the General Population 38: Lawrence E. Marks: Weak synesthesia in perception and language 39: Cesare Parise and Charles Spence: Audiovisual cross-modal correspondences in the general population 40: Argiro Vatakis: Cross-modality in speech processing 41: Vincent E. Walsh: Magnitudes, metaphors, and modalities: A theory of magnitude revisited 42: Laurent Renier and Anne G. De Volder: Sensory substitution devices: Creating 'artificial synesthesias' 43: Christine Cuskley and Simon Kirby: Synesthesia, cross-modality, and language evolution Part 8: Perspectives on Synesthesia 44: Sean A. Day: Synesthesia: A first-person perspective 45: Noam Sagiv and Chris D. Frith: Synesthesia and consciousness 46: Brian L. Keeley: What exactly is a sense? 47: Mary-Ellen Lynall and Colin Blakemore: What synesthesia isn't 48: V. S. Ramachandran and David Brang: From molecules to metaphor: Outlooks on synesthesia research 49: Jamie Ward: Synesthesia: Where have we been? Where are we going?