Bi-directional audiovisual influences on temporal modulation discrimination

  • Varghese L
  • Mathias S
  • Bensussen S
  • et al.
7Citations
Citations of this article
32Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Cross-modal interactions of auditory and visual temporal modulation were examined in a game-like experimental framework. Participants observed an audiovisual stimulus (an animated, sound-emitting fish) whose sound intensity and/or visual size oscillated sinusoidally at either 6 or 7 Hz. Participants made speeded judgments about the modulation rate in either the auditory or visual modality while doing their best to ignore information from the other modality. Modulation rate in the task-irrelevant modality matched the modulation rate in the task-relevant modality (congruent conditions), was at the other rate (incongruent conditions), or had no modulation (unmodulated conditions). Both performance accuracy and parameter estimates from drift-diffusion decision modeling indicated that (1) the presence of temporal modulation in both modalities, regardless of whether modulations were matched or mismatched in rate, resulted in audiovisual interactions; (2) congruence in audiovisual temporal modulation resulted in more reliable information processing; and (3) the effects of congruence appeared to be stronger when judging visual modulation rates (i.e., audition influencing vision), than when judging auditory modulation rates (i.e., vision influencing audition). The results demonstrate that audiovisual interactions from temporal modulations are bi-directional in nature, but with potential asymmetries in the size of the effect in each direction.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Varghese, L., Mathias, S. R., Bensussen, S., Chou, K., Goldberg, H. R., Sun, Y., … Shinn-Cunningham, B. G. (2017). Bi-directional audiovisual influences on temporal modulation discrimination. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 141(4), 2474–2488. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4979470

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free