Abstract

When two brief sounds are presented with a short flash of light, we often perceive that the flash blinks twice. This phenomenon, called the “sound-induced flash illusion”, has been investigated as an example of how humans finely integrate multisensory information, more specifically, the temporal content of perception. However, it is unclear whether nonhuman animals experience the illusion. Therefore, we investigated whether the Mongolian gerbil, a rodent with relatively good eyesight, experiences this illusion. The novel object recognition (NOR) paradigm was used to evaluate the gerbil’s natural (i.e., untrained) capacity for multimodal integration. A light-emitting diode embedded within an object presented time-varying visual stimuli (different flashing patterns). The animals were first familiarised with repetitive single flashes. Then, various sound stimuli were introduced during test trials. An increase in exploration suggested that the animals perceived a flashing pattern differently only when the contradicting sound (double beeps) was presented simultaneously with a single flash. This result shows that the gerbil may experience the sound-induced flash illusion and indicates for the first time that rodents may have the capacity to integrate temporal content of perception in a sophisticated manner as do humans.

Highlights

  • When two brief sounds are presented with a short flash of light, we often perceive that the flash blinks twice

  • Because the sound-induced flash illusion is not related to human-specific perception, unlike the McGurk effect, it is reasonable to assume that this type of multimodal integration is fairly common in many animal species

  • We used the novel object recognition (NOR) paradigm to investigate whether the Mongolian gerbil has the capacity to perceive the sound-induced flash illusion

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Summary

Introduction

When two brief sounds are presented with a short flash of light, we often perceive that the flash blinks twice This phenomenon, called the “sound-induced flash illusion”, has been investigated as an example of how humans finely integrate multisensory information, the temporal content of perception. It is unclear whether nonhuman animals experience the illusion. An increase in exploration suggested that the animals perceived a flashing pattern differently only when the contradicting sound (double beeps) was presented simultaneously with a single flash This result shows that the gerbil may experience the sound-induced flash illusion and indicates for the first time that rodents may have the capacity to integrate temporal content of perception in a sophisticated manner as do humans. We used the NOR paradigm to investigate whether the Mongolian gerbil has the capacity to perceive the sound-induced flash illusion

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