The main symptom of crosstalk is as said desaturation of colors, some color shift can occur too. This occurs because the leaks between color channels bring them closer together, ie desaturation.
There's another symptom too though which is mazing in the demosaicing. I've cut out a 100% crop of the top right corner of the A7r image to show how it looks, both in original and increased contrast that makes it more visible.
The mazing occurs because crosstalk will pass from red to green in one column and from blue to green in another, which means that the both green pixels that without crosstalk would have equal values (for a solid color ceiling) will get separated. Separated greens means that the demosaicer will see and try to render detail there, and you get mazing.
It should be said that Capture One's demosaicer is quite robust against green separation, so the result here is better than it would have been with many other raw converters. The demosaicing algorithm designer must make a tradeoff between being robust and extracting detail, and it seems like Capture One has focused more on robustness than maximizing fine detail.
I've got to study these issues in more detail when the first tech cam demonstrations with the IQ250 was released which really highlighted it. Since then I know that crosstalk has been there with tech wides also for CCD sensors, I can even get it with my old Aptus 75 and the SK35XL and even the modern SK60XL when I shift to the image circle edge, but with the Sony sensor like in the IQ250 and here in the Sony A7r the crosstalk is much more severe. When developing the crosstalk cancellation algorithm I've had my own camera system as test bed where it seems to work well, I'm not sure how it will handle the more severe crosstalk with the A7r and IQ250 though, so I'd love to get some test material if I can
. If I can make it work it will make both the A7r and IQ250 much more usable with tech wides. It's that red LCC shot I need in addition to the normal white which make it a bit more cumbersome (it does not need to be shot in the field though, can be shot later if you just have noted the shift/tilt/aperture settings).
With these new CMOS sensors in mirrorless cameras and digital backs I think it's good to be aware of this issue so you know what can happen and what to look for to detect it (ie desaturation and mazing).