| Literature DB >> 22232613 |
Arjen Alink1, Felix Euler, Elena Galeano, Alexandra Krugliak, Wolf Singer, Axel Kohler.
Abstract
In this study, it is demonstrated that moving sounds have an effect on the direction in which one sees visual stimuli move. During the main experiment sounds were presented consecutively at four speaker locations inducing left or rightward auditory apparent motion. On the path of auditory apparent motion, visual apparent motion stimuli were presented with a high degree of directional ambiguity. The main outcome of this experiment is that our participants perceived visual apparent motion stimuli that were ambiguous (equally likely to be perceived as moving left or rightward) more often as moving in the same direction than in the opposite direction of auditory apparent motion. During the control experiment we replicated this finding and found no effect of sound motion direction on eye movements. This indicates that auditory motion can capture our visual motion percept when visual motion direction is insufficiently determinate without affecting eye movements.Entities:
Keywords: Bayesian; audiovisual; bistable; eye movement; motion capture; multisensory integration
Year: 2012 PMID: 22232613 PMCID: PMC3249388 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1(A) A schematic depiction of the stimuli employed in this study illustrating a rightward auditory motion trial during which the participant perceived rightward visual apparent motion. Squares depict the four speaker locations and the musical note symbols represent the location at which a sound is being presented. The direction of auditory apparent motion is depicted by the blue arrows and the direction of visual apparent motion by yellow arrows. (B) An illustration of three possible endpoints of visual apparent motion whose position is expressed as the distance from the nearest left starting point divided by the inter-column distance. The 10/30 endpoints most likely induce rightward visual apparent motion and the 20/30 endpoints most likely induce leftward visual apparent motion while the 15/30 endpoints are as likely to induce left as rightward visual apparent motion.
Figure 2(A) Left: This figure contains the plotted data for an exemplary participant (main experiment) and the fitted logistic functions for all three conditions. The visual apparent motion percept of this participant was estimated to be bistable for a shift of 0.477 of the inter-column distance. For this bistability shift the participant was estimated to perceive the visual apparent motion stimulus as moving rightward in 70% of the rightward auditory motion trials and in 46% of the leftward auditory motion trials. Right: Box-and-whisker diagrams depicting the group data for the main experiment for the percent perceived rightward visual apparent motion at the bistability shift which was estimated on an individual level. (B) Results of bootstrapping analysis (N = 5000) for group data comparing different models for thresholds and slopes in the three conditions (Leftward, No-Sound, Rightward). The histogram shows the distribution of likelihood ratios for the simulated data (see Materials and Methods for details). The dotted line indicates the likelihood ratio for the actual data. The results indicate that assuming varying thresholds for the three conditions is a more adequate model than a fixed threshold for all three conditions (left panel), whereas this is not the case for slope (right panel).
Figure 3(A) Same as Figure 2A right but showing the results for the control experiment. (B) In the control experiment, the bootstrapping analysis (see Figure 2B) confirmed the threshold effect. Additionally, this analysis identified a difference in the slope parameter of the psychometric function.
Figure 4(A) Spatial distribution of fixation recorded during the control experiment based on the eye-tracking data of all 10 participants plotted separately for the no-sound, leftward auditory motion, and rightward auditory motion conditions. (B) Mean and SEM (across participants) of the event-related horizontal eye movements (ERHEMs) computed for trials during which participants were presented with left and rightward auditory motion stimuli (upper graph) and mean and SEM of the ERHEMs computed for trials during which participants perceived left and rightward visual apparent motion (lower graph). The blue boxes (S1–S4) indicate the time at which the four sounds were presented during a trial and the yellow boxes (VAM1–VAM2) indicate the timing of the first and second visual apparent motion stimuli. The gray transparent box in the upper part indicates the time period (600–900 ms) during which there was a significant effect of visual apparent motion percept.