Visual localization ability influences cross-modal bias

被引:117
|
作者
Hairston, WD [1 ]
Wallace, MT [1 ]
Vaughan, JW [1 ]
Stein, BE [1 ]
Norris, JL [1 ]
Schirillo, JA [1 ]
机构
[1] Wake Forest Univ, Bowman Gray Sch Med, Dept Neurobiol & Anat, Winston Salem, NC 27157 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1162/089892903321107792
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The ability of a visual signal to influence the localization of an auditory target (i.e., "cross-modal bias") was examined as a function of the spatial disparity between the two stimuli and their absolute locations in space. Three experimental issues were examined: (a) the effect of a spatially disparate visual stimulus on auditory localization judgments; (b) how the ability to localize visual, auditory, and spatially aligned multisensory (visual-auditory) targets is related to cross-modal bias, and (c) the relationship between the magnitude of cross-modal bias and the perception that the two stimuli are spatially "unified" (i.e., originate from the same location). Whereas variability in localization of auditory targets was large and fairly uniform for all tested locations, variability in localizing visual or spatially aligned multisensory targets was much smaller, and increased with increasing distance from the midline. This trend proved to be strongly correlated with biasing effectiveness, for although visual-auditory bias was unexpectedly large in all conditions tested, it decreased progressively (as localization variability increased) with increasing distance from the midline. Thus, central visual stimuli had a substantially greater biasing effect on auditory target localization than did more peripheral visual stimuli. It was also apparent that cross-modal bias decreased as the degree of visual-auditory disparity increased. Consequently, the greatest visual-auditory biases were obtained with small disparities at central locations. In all cases, the magnitude of these biases covaried with judgments of spatial unity. The results suggest that functional properties of the visual system play the predominant role in determining these visual-auditory interactions and that cross-modal biases can be substantially greater than previously noted.
引用
收藏
页码:20 / 29
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Learning Visual Locomotion with Cross-Modal Supervision
    Loquercio, Antonio
    Kumar, Ashish
    Malik, Jitendra
    2023 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION (ICRA 2023), 2023, : 7295 - 7302
  • [32] Auditory, visual, and cross-modal negative priming
    Buchner, A
    Zabal, A
    Mayr, S
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2003, 10 (04) : 917 - 923
  • [33] Cross-modal exogenous visual selective attention
    Zhao, C
    Yang, H
    Zhang, K
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 35 (3-4) : 100 - 100
  • [34] TACTUAL AND VISUAL INTERPOLATION - A CROSS-MODAL COMPARISON
    CHURCHILL, AV
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1960, 14 (03): : 183 - 190
  • [35] Cross-modal influences on representational momentum and representational gravity
    Hubbard, Timothy L.
    Courtney, Jon R.
    PERCEPTION, 2010, 39 (06) : 851 - 862
  • [36] RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY OF A CROSS-MODAL TEST OF SPATIAL ABILITY
    KUMAR, S
    PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS, 1975, 41 (03) : 805 - 806
  • [37] Semantic Collaborative Learning for Cross-Modal Moment Localization
    Hu, Yupeng
    Wang, Kun
    Liu, Meng
    Tang, Haoyu
    Nie, Liqiang
    ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2024, 42 (02)
  • [38] Cross-modal integration of natural visual and auditory stimuli
    Tichacek, K
    Onat, S
    König, P
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2005, : 82 - 82
  • [39] The role of visual stimuli in cross-modal Stroop interference
    Lutfi-Proctor, Danielle A.
    Elliott, Emily M.
    Cowan, Nelson
    PSYCH JOURNAL, 2014, 3 (01) : 17 - 29
  • [40] CROSS-MODAL EFFECTS ON VISUAL AND AUDITORY OBJECT PERCEPTION
    OLEARY, A
    RHODES, G
    PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 1984, 35 (06): : 565 - 569