| Literature DB >> 35765810 |
Logan S James1,2, A Leonie Baier1,2, Rachel A Page2, Paul Clements3, Kimberly L Hunter4, Ryan C Taylor2,4, Michael J Ryan1,2.
Abstract
Stimulation in one sensory modality can affect perception in a separate modality, resulting in diverse effects including illusions in humans. This can also result in cross-modal facilitation, a process where sensory performance in one modality is improved by stimulation in another modality. For instance, a simple sound can improve performance in a visual task in both humans and cats. However, the range of contexts and underlying mechanisms that evoke such facilitation effects remain poorly understood. Here, we demonstrated cross-modal stimulation in wild-caught túngara frogs, a species with well-studied acoustic preferences in females. We first identified that a combined visual and seismic cue (vocal sac movement and water ripple) was behaviourally relevant for females choosing between two courtship calls in a phonotaxis assay. We then found that this combined cross-modal stimulus rescued a species-typical acoustic preference in the presence of background noise that otherwise abolished the preference. These results highlight how cross-modal stimulation can prime attention in receivers to improve performance during decision-making. With this, we provide the foundation for future work uncovering the processes and conditions that promote cross-modal facilitation effects.Entities:
Keywords: comparative psychology; multi-modal communication; multi-modal integration; multi-sensory processing; túngara frogs
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35765810 PMCID: PMC9240679 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2022.0098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.812