“…Structural (or perhaps better said, physiological; Spence and Di Stefano, 2022, on this point), and some statistical correspondences (namely those based on the physical regularities of the environment), such as the pitch-size association, might well be expected to be universal (e.g., Gallace and Spence, 2006;Parise and Spence, 2009; see also Peters et al, 2015;Pisanski et al, 2017). That said, those statistical correspondences that happen to be based on more 'arbitrary' combinations of features (what Walker-Andrews, 1994, has termed 'Arbitrary and Artificial' correspondences), such as, for example, those that have been documented to exist between smell and taste stimuli (e.g., Blank and Mattes, 1990;Spence, 2008), and/or between colour and taste (e.g., Shankar et al, 2010;Spence et al, 2015), or between tastes and visual textures (Barbosa Escobar et al, 2022) are presumably more likely to show robust cultural variation.…”