Abstract

The role of attention on multisensory processing is still poorly understood. In particular, it is unclear whether directing attention toward a sensory cue dynamically reweights cue reliability during integration of multiple sensory signals. In this study, we investigated the impact of attention in combining audio-tactile signals in an optimal fashion. We used the Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE) model to predict audio-tactile spatial localization on the body surface. We developed a new audio-tactile device composed by several small units, each one consisting of a speaker and a tactile vibrator independently controllable by external software. We tested participants in an attentional and a non-attentional condition. In the attentional experiment, participants performed a dual task paradigm: they were required to evaluate the duration of a sound while performing an audio-tactile spatial task. Three unisensory or multisensory stimuli, conflictual or not conflictual sounds and vibrations arranged along the horizontal axis, were presented sequentially. In the primary task participants had to evaluate in a space bisection task the position of the second stimulus (the probe) with respect to the others (the standards). In the secondary task they had to report occasionally changes in duration of the second auditory stimulus. In the non-attentional task participants had only to perform the primary task (space bisection). Our results showed an enhanced auditory precision (and auditory weights) in the auditory attentional condition with respect to the control non-attentional condition. The results of this study support the idea that modality-specific attention modulates multisensory integration.

Highlights

  • Spatio-temporal coincident sensory signals are combined together to generate multisensory percepts

  • Following the Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE) model (Equation 1) we should expect tactile dominance in the non-attentional condition and auditory dominance or no dominance in the attentional condition

  • In this study we investigated the effects of modality-specific attention on sensory reliability and on multisensory integration

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Summary

Introduction

Spatio-temporal coincident sensory signals are combined together to generate multisensory percepts. Sensory information is weighted to its reliability and integrated in a statistically optimal fashion (Clarke and Yuille, 1990; Ghahramani et al, 1997; Ernst and Banks, 2002; Alais and Burr, 2004; Landy et al, 2011). Years of intensive studies have produced a wide body of research on the topic of multisensory integration, it is still unclear whether or not attended stimuli are integrated differently from those that are not attended. It is not clear whether the mechanism of multisensory integration occurs automatically and pre-attentively or whether attention affects the sensory binding. Oruc et al (2008)

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