| Literature DB >> 21927609 |
Vincenzo Romei1, Benjamin De Haas, Robert M Mok, Jon Driver.
Abstract
There is increasing interest in multisensory influences upon sensory-specific judgments, such as when auditory stimuli affect visual perception. Here we studied whether the duration of an auditory event can objectively affect the perceived duration of a co-occurring visual event. On each trial, participants were presented with a pair of successive flashes and had to judge whether the first or second was longer. Two beeps were presented with the flashes. The order of short and long stimuli could be the same across audition and vision (audio-visual congruent) or reversed, so that the longer flash was accompanied by the shorter beep and vice versa (audio-visual incongruent); or the two beeps could have the same duration as each other. Beeps and flashes could onset synchronously or asynchronously. In a further control experiment, the beep durations were much longer (tripled) than the flashes. Results showed that visual duration discrimination sensitivity (d') was significantly higher for congruent (and significantly lower for incongruent) audio-visual synchronous combinations, relative to the visual-only presentation. This effect was abolished when auditory and visual stimuli were presented asynchronously, or when sound durations tripled those of flashes. We conclude that the temporal properties of co-occurring auditory stimuli influence the perceived duration of visual stimuli and that this can reflect genuine changes in visual sensitivity rather than mere response bias.Entities:
Keywords: audition; crossmodal interactions; multisensory integration; response bias; signal-detection theory; time perception; vision
Year: 2011 PMID: 21927609 PMCID: PMC3168883 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Schematic timelines representing conditions in Experiment 1A and 1B. In Experiment 1A all corresponding auditory (red lines marked with label “AUD”) and visual (blue lines marked with label “VIS”) stimuli had the same onset (synchronous conditions) while in Experiment 1B visual stimuli always preceded auditory stimuli by 500 ms (asynchronous conditions). In both situations, each pair of stimuli within one modality was separated by a 1000-ms interval; the order of short and long stimuli could be the same across auditory and visual modalities (congruent) or reversed between them (incongruent). In the both-auditor-short condition, both successive sounds had the shorter visual duration (and vice versa for both-auditory-long). Finally a visual-only condition served as a baseline measure.
Figure 2Mean visual duration discrimination sensitivity (d′), SEM indicated) for each condition in Experiment 1a (A) and 1b (B). Asterisks in 1a indicate significant differences relative to the synchronous–congruent condition that gave best performance (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001), see leftmost bar in left graph. None of the pairwise contrasts were significant for the asynchronous conditions (see right graph).
Figure 3Mean visual duration discrimination sensitivity (d′), SEM indicated) for each condition in Experiment 2. Asterisks above bars point to significant differences relative to the visual-only baseline, with the latter represented here by the orange dashed line with SEM shading. The significant enhancement or decrease of sensitivity, for the untripled congruent and incongruent conditions (respectively) replicates the findings of Experiment 1a. These effects were eliminated or reduced (respectively) for the corresponding two new tripled conditions, in which a sound still onset concurrently with each flash, but the sounds now were three times as long.