Abstract

The brain represents the space immediately surrounding the body differently to more distant parts of space. Direct evidence for this ‘peripersonal space’ representation comes from neurophysiological studies in monkeys, which show distance-dependent responses to visual stimuli in neurons with spatially coincident tactile responses. Most evidence for peripersonal space in humans is indirect: spatial- and distance-dependent modulations of reaction times and error rates in behavioural tasks. In one task often used to assess peripersonal space, sounds near the body have been argued to speed reactions to tactile stimuli. We conducted four experiments attempting to measure this distance-dependent audiotactile interaction. We found no distance-dependent enhancement of tactile processing in error rates or task performance, but found some evidence for a general speeding of reaction times by 9.5 ms when sounds were presented near the hand. A systematic review revealed an overestimation of reported effect sizes, lack of control conditions, a wide variety of methods, post hoc removal of data, and flexible methods of data analysis. After correcting for the speed of sound, removing biased or inconclusive studies, correcting for temporal expectancy, and using the trim-and-fill method to correct for publication bias, meta-analysis revealed an overall benefit of 15.2 ms when tactile stimuli are accompanied by near sounds compared to sounds further away. While this effect may be due to peripersonal space, response probability and the number of trials per condition explained significant proportions of variance in this near versus far benefit. These confounds need to be addressed, and alternative explanations ruled out by future, ideally pre-registered, studies.

Highlights

  • The space immediately surrounding the body seems to be represented by specific multisensory neurons in parietal, premotor, and sub-cortical areas of the macaque monkey brain (Bufacchi and Iannetti 2018)

  • Poor performance was due to participants incorrectly responding on 12% of trials without a stimulus, and on 63% of trials with a strong stimulus—they were not able to discriminate weak stimuli from strong stimuli

  • In line with Serino et al (2007), participants made vocal responses on average 28 ms earlier when target vibrotactile stimuli on the hand were accompanied by sounds presented near the hand, compared to 1 m away

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Summary

Introduction

The space immediately surrounding the body seems to be represented by specific multisensory neurons in parietal, premotor, and sub-cortical areas of the macaque monkey brain (Bufacchi and Iannetti 2018). Evidence for this representation of space comes primarily from animal studies; several lines of evidence are compatible with the existence of peripersonal space in humans (Holmes 2013). Most of the evidence from animal studies comes from this visual–tactile domain. There is very little evidence for a representation of auditory peripersonal space in monkeys. While macaque ventral intraparietal cortex has some neurons with somatosensory,

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