Eccentricity dependent auditory enhancement of visual stimulus detection but not discrimination

Sensory perception is enhanced by the complementary information provided by our different sensory modalities and even apparently task irrelevant stimuli in one modality can facilitate performance in another. While perception in general comprises both, the detection of sensory objects as well as thei...

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Published inFrontiers in integrative neuroscience Vol. 7; p. 52
Main Authors Gleiss, Stephanie, Kayser, Christoph
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 01.01.2013
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ISSN1662-5145
1662-5145
DOI10.3389/fnint.2013.00052

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Summary:Sensory perception is enhanced by the complementary information provided by our different sensory modalities and even apparently task irrelevant stimuli in one modality can facilitate performance in another. While perception in general comprises both, the detection of sensory objects as well as their discrimination and recognition, most studies on audio-visual interactions have focused on either of these aspects. However, previous evidence, neuroanatomical projections between early sensory cortices and computational mechanisms suggest that sounds might differentially affect visual detection and discrimination and differentially at central and peripheral retinal locations. We performed an experiment to directly test this by probing the enhancement of visual detection and discrimination by auxiliary sounds at different visual eccentricities and within the same subjects. Specifically, we quantified the enhancement provided by sounds that reduce the overall uncertainty about the visual stimulus beyond basic multisensory co-stimulation. This revealed a general trend for stronger enhancement at peripheral locations in both tasks, but a statistically significant effect only for detection and only at peripheral locations. Overall this suggests that there are topographic differences in the auditory facilitation of basic visual processes and that these may differentially affect basic aspects of visual recognition.
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Edited by: Micah M. Murray, University Hospital Center; University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Reviewed by: Jean Vroomen, University of Tilburg, Netherlands; Vincenzo Romei, University of Essex, UK
ISSN:1662-5145
1662-5145
DOI:10.3389/fnint.2013.00052