| Literature DB >> 34104384 |
Yueying Li1, Zimo Li, Aihui Deng, Hewu Zheng, Jianxin Chen2, Yanna Ren3, Weiping Yang4.
Abstract
Although emotional audiovisual integration has been investigated previously, whether emotional audiovisual integration is affected by the spatial allocation of visual attention is currently unknown. To examine this question, a variant of the exogenous spatial cueing paradigm was adopted, in which stimuli varying by facial expressions and nonverbal affective prosody were used to express six basic emotions (happiness, anger, disgust, sadness, fear, surprise) via a visual, an auditory, or an audiovisual modality. The emotional stimuli were preceded by an unpredictive cue that was used to attract participants' visual attention. The results showed significantly higher accuracy and quicker response times in response to bimodal audiovisual stimuli than to unimodal visual or auditory stimuli for emotional perception under both valid and invalid cue conditions. The auditory facilitation effect was stronger than the visual facilitation effect under exogenous attention for the six emotions tested. Larger auditory enhancement was induced when the target was presented at the expected location than at the unexpected location. For emotional perception, happiness shared the biggest auditory enhancement among all six emotions. However, the influence of exogenous cueing effect on emotional perception seemed to be absent.Entities:
Keywords: audiovisual stimuli; crossmodal integration; emotion; exogenous attention
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104384 PMCID: PMC8167015 DOI: 10.1177/20416695211018714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 1.Design of the experimental paradigm.
Mean Accuracy (%) and Response Times (ms) of Emotion Judgment Based on Visual, Auditory, and Audiovisual Stimulus Modalities Under Valid and Invalid Cue Conditions Across Emotion Categories.
Mean accuracy (%) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anger | Disgust | Fear | Happiness | Sadness | Surprise | ||
| Valid cue | Visual | 83.3 (1.7) | 83.3 (1.6) | 74.2 (2.2) | 93.0 (1.1) | 76.3 (2.6) | 83.0 (1.8) |
| Auditory | 65.6 (2.8) | 37.9 (2.2) | 53.7 (2.2) | 35.6 (2.6) | 58.7 (2.6) | 67.3 (2.0) | |
| Crossmodal | 88.2 (1.6) | 86.7 (1.8) | 80.3 (2.1) | 92.6 (1.5) | 82.2 (2.0) | 86.9 (1.6) | |
| Invalid cue | Visual | 79.2 (1.9) | 81.8 (1.8) | 72.3 (2.5) | 93.1 (1.5) | 74.7 (2.6) | 83.6 (1.7) |
| Auditory | 66.6 (2.9) | 85.9 (2.0) | 52.6 (2.1) | 34.4 (2.7) | 57.0 (2.6) | 66.9 (2.0) | |
| Crossmodal | 85.9 (1.7) | 85.8 (1.9) | 79.9 (1.9) | 93.9 (0.9) | 80.1 (2.0) | 86.9 (1.8) | |
Response time (ms) | |||||||
|
|
| Anger | Disgust | Fear | Happiness | Sadness | Surprise |
| Valid cue | Visual | 541.0 (21.4) | 527.3 (24.1) | 600.9 (30.9) | 345.6 (18.1) | 565.3 (26.9) | 542.9 (29.2) |
| Auditory | 633.3 (25.6) | 758.8 (33.7) | 724.2 (28.5) | 733.0 (26.8) | 622.4 (19.2) | 704.3 (23.9) | |
| Crossmodal | 494.5 (25.2) | 486.8 (22.2) | 540.4 (27.6) | 372.8 (17.4) | 515.8 (22.8) | 552.3 (27.2) | |
| Invalid cue | Visual | 567.8 (24.9) | 563.9 (27.7) | 604.6 (28.4) | 361.9 (15.5) | 574.6 (26.8) | 585.9 (29.4) |
| Auditory | 613.3 (26.1) | 773.5 (29.9) | 709.3 (28.1) | 785.7 (31.8) | 621.8 (21.5) | 696.1 (25.2) | |
| Crossmodal | 497.9 (23.3) | 514.1 (24.7) | 581.4 (25.6) | 420.9 (15.9) | 529.6 (23.0) | 580.6 (28.4) | |
Note. Standard errors are given in parentheses.
Figure 2.Response times and accuracy for each emotion category with respect to visual, auditory, and audiovisual modality. Error bars represent the standard error (SE). Asterisks indicate significant differences between presentation conditions (**p < .01, ***p < .001).
Figure 3.Enhancement scores in accuracy and RTs under each emotion category. Error bars represent the SE. Asterisks indicate significant differences between presentation conditions (**p < .01, ***p < .001).
Figure 4.Enhancement scores in RTs with respect to cue validity for all emotion categories. Error bars represent the SE. Asterisks indicate significant differences between presentation conditions (**p < .01).
Figure 5.Test for the violation of race model inequality under valid cue conditions (A) and invalid cue conditions (B). The figure illustrates the cumulative probability curves of the RT under the visual, auditory, and audiovisual conditions. The summed probability for the visual and auditory responses is depicted by the race model curve. Note that the crossmodal responses are faster than the race model prediction from 110 ms to 130 ms under invalid conditions and from 100 ms to 120 ms under valid conditions (all p < .05).