Work Package 1 (WP1) used next generation sequencing to identify rare variants associated with synaesthesia in three multi-generational families. Dr. Tilot found that the resulting list of variants was enriched in genes that were involved in axonogenesis, the process by which neurons connect with each other during development. She then integrated the resulting list of genes with data on where (which brain regions, what cell types) and when (early development through adulthood) they were active in the brain (WP3). These results were presented at the 2017 Society for Neuroscience meeting and published in Tilot et al., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 2018. The paper generated a large amount of international media coverage, including print, web, and radio reports in outlets like the US public radio program Science Friday, the magazine Newsweek, and the Spanish newspaper El Pais.
WP2 centered on how common variation contributes to synaesthesia and included development of the world’s largest cohort of verified synaesthetes with DNA samples available for research (over 800 as of May 2018). Dr. Tilot also managed a new collaboration with the Generation Scotland project, which involved recontacting over 6000 individuals with existing genotype data and inviting them to complete a synaesthesia testing battery. Data analysis is ongoing and will include synaesthetes from the Max Planck Institute cohort as well as Generation Scotland. Dr. Tilot will present the results at the Royal Society Discussion Meeting and publish the report in the special issue of Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. B.
WP4 made dissemination of the results and public outreach a core component of the action, and Dr. Tilot made such activities a regular part of her agenda. Highlights from this effort include a popular “Ask Me Anything” hosted by Reddit’s r/Science, interviews with students in the Netherlands, Spain, and the USA, a lay audience article on synaesthesia for the journal Science in School, and an invited talk at the International Association for Synaesthetes Artists and Scientists’ inaugural symposium.