Abstract

Sensory information registered in one modality can influence perception associated with sensory information registered in another modality. The current work focuses on one particularly salient form of such multisensory interaction: audio-visual motion perception. Previous studies have shown that watching visual motion and listening to auditory motion influence each other, but results from those studies are mixed with regard to the nature of the interactions promoting that influence and where within the sequence of information processing those interactions transpire. To address these issues, we investigated whether (i) concurrent audio-visual motion stimulation during an adaptation phase impacts the strength of the visual motion aftereffect (MAE) during a subsequent test phase, and (ii) whether the magnitude of that impact was dependent on the congruence between auditory and visual motion experienced during adaptation. Results show that congruent direction of audio-visual motion during adaptation induced a stronger initial impression and a slower decay of the MAE than did the incongruent direction, which is not attributable to differential patterns of eye movements during adaptation. The audio-visual congruency effects measured here imply that visual motion perception emerges from integration of audio-visual motion information at a sensory neural stage of processing.

Highlights

  • Sensory information registered in one modality can influence perception associated with sensory information registered in another modality

  • motion aftereffect (MAE) strength was indexed by the duration of illusory motion[49], which depends on the strength of the visual motion experienced during adaptation[32]

  • We predicted that the audio-visual direction congruence would strengthen the visual motion experienced during adaptation, resulting in longer MAE durations

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Summary

Introduction

Sensory information registered in one modality can influence perception associated with sensory information registered in another modality. We performed two experiments in which the congruence of auditory and visual motion was varied during the adaptation phase of a trial and used the resulting MAE as an index of multisensory interaction.

Results
Conclusion
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