Intermodal attention affects the processing of the temporal alignment of audiovisual stimuli

被引:0
|
作者
Durk Talsma
Daniel Senkowski
Marty G. Woldorff
机构
[1] Vrije University Amsterdam,Cognitive Psychology Department
[2] University of Twente,Department of Cognitive Psychology and Ergonomics
[3] University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,Department of Neurophysiology and Pathophysiology
[4] Duke University,Center for Cognitive Neuroscience and Department of Psychiatry
来源
关键词
Electrophysiology; EEG; ERP; Multisensory; SOA;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The temporal asynchrony between inputs to different sensory modalities has been shown to be a critical factor influencing the interaction between such inputs. We used scalp-recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate the effects of attention on the processing of audiovisual multisensory stimuli as the temporal asynchrony between the auditory and visual inputs varied across the audiovisual integration window (i.e., up to 125 ms). Randomized streams of unisensory auditory stimuli, unisensory visual stimuli, and audiovisual stimuli (consisting of the temporally proximal presentation of the visual and auditory stimulus components) were presented centrally while participants attended to either the auditory or the visual modality to detect occasional target stimuli in that modality. ERPs elicited by each of the contributing sensory modalities were extracted by signal processing techniques from the combined ERP waveforms elicited by the multisensory stimuli. This was done for each of the five different 50-ms subranges of stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA: e.g., V precedes A by 125–75 ms, by 75–25 ms, etc.). The extracted ERPs for the visual inputs of the multisensory stimuli were compared among each other and with the ERPs to the unisensory visual control stimuli, separately when attention was directed to the visual or to the auditory modality. The results showed that the attention effects on the right-hemisphere visual P1 was largest when auditory and visual stimuli were temporally aligned. In contrast, the N1 attention effect was smallest at this latency, suggesting that attention may play a role in the processing of the relative temporal alignment of the constituent parts of multisensory stimuli. At longer latencies an occipital selection negativity for the attended versus unattended visual stimuli was also observed, but this effect did not vary as a function of SOA, suggesting that by that latency a stable representation of the auditory and visual stimulus components has been established.
引用
收藏
页码:313 / 328
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] “Paying” attention to audiovisual speech: Do incongruent stimuli incur greater costs?
    Violet A. Brown
    Julia F. Strand
    Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2019, 81 : 1743 - 1756
  • [42] "Paying" attention to audiovisual speech: Do incongruent stimuli incur greater costs?
    Brown, Violet A.
    Strand, Julia F.
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2019, 81 (06) : 1743 - 1756
  • [43] Neural substrates involved in the processing of six different emotional audiovisual stimuli
    Park, Mi-Sook
    Sohn, Sunju
    Lee, Ok-Hyun
    Suk, Ji-A
    Kim, Sook-Hee
    Sohn, Jin-Hun
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2011, 81 (03) : 339 - 340
  • [44] Processing of audiovisual stimuli in aphasic and non-brain-damaged listeners
    Hessler, Dorte
    Jonkers, Roel
    Bastiaanse, Roelien
    APHASIOLOGY, 2012, 26 (01) : 83 - 102
  • [45] NEURAL CORRELATES OF AUDIOVISUAL TEMPORAL PROCESSING - COMPARISON OF TEMPORAL ORDER AND SIMULTANEITY JUDGMENTS
    Binder, M.
    NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 300 : 432 - 447
  • [46] Temporal and spatio-temporal attention to tactile stimuli in extinction patients
    Guerrini, C
    Aglioti, SM
    CORTEX, 2006, 42 (01) : 17 - 27
  • [47] DISTANCE OF ATTENTION SHIFT AFFECTS RT FOR ONLY SOME STIMULI
    VAUGHAN, J
    BULLETIN OF THE PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY, 1984, 22 (04) : 272 - 272
  • [48] Temporal attention for visual food stimuli in restrained eaters
    Neimeijer, Renate A. M.
    de Jong, Peter J.
    Roefs, Anne
    APPETITE, 2013, 64 : 5 - 11
  • [49] Multiple concurrent temporal recalibrations driven by audiovisual stimuli with apparent physical differences
    Yuan, Xiangyong
    Bi, Cuihua
    Huang, Xiting
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2015, 77 (04) : 1321 - 1332
  • [50] Multiple concurrent temporal recalibrations driven by audiovisual stimuli with apparent physical differences
    Xiangyong Yuan
    Cuihua Bi
    Xiting Huang
    Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2015, 77 : 1321 - 1332