Abstract

Hearing synchronous sounds may facilitate the visual search for the concurrently changed visual targets. Evidence for this audiovisual attentional facilitation effect mainly comes from studies using artificial stimuli with relatively simple temporal dynamics, indicating a stimulus-driven mechanism whereby synchronous audiovisual cues create a salient object to capture attention. Here, we investigated the crossmodal attentional facilitation effect on biological motion (BM), a natural, biologically significant stimulus with complex and unique dynamic profiles. We found that listening to temporally congruent sounds, compared with incongruent sounds, enhanced the visual search for BM targets. More intriguingly, such a facilitation effect requires the presence of distinctive local motion cues (especially the accelerations in feet movement) independent of the global BM configuration, suggesting a crossmodal mechanism triggered by specific biological features to enhance the salience of BM signals. These findings provide novel insights into how audiovisual integration boosts attention to biologically relevant motion stimuli and extend the function of a proposed life detection system driven by local kinematics of BM to multisensory life motion perception.

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