Abstract

BackgroundIt is well-known that human beings are able to associate stimuli (novel or not) perceived in their environment. For example, this ability is used by children in reading acquisition when arbitrary associations between visual and auditory stimuli must be learned. The studies tend to consider it as an “implicit” process triggered by the learning of letter/sound correspondences. The study described in this paper examined whether the addition of the visuo-haptic exploration would help adults to learn more effectively the arbitrary association between visual and auditory novel stimuli.Methodology/Principal FindingsAdults were asked to learn 15 new arbitrary associations between visual stimuli and their corresponding sounds using two learning methods which differed according to the perceptual modalities involved in the exploration of the visual stimuli. Adults used their visual modality in the “classic” learning method and both their visual and haptic modalities in the “multisensory” learning one. After both learning methods, participants showed a similar above-chance ability to recognize the visual and auditory stimuli and the audio-visual associations. However, the ability to recognize the visual-auditory associations was better after the multisensory method than after the classic one.Conclusion/SignificanceThis study revealed that adults learned more efficiently the arbitrary association between visual and auditory novel stimuli when the visual stimuli were explored with both vision and touch. The results are discussed from the perspective of how they relate to the functional differences of the manual haptic modality and the hypothesis of a “haptic bond” between visual and auditory stimuli.

Highlights

  • It is well-known that human beings are able to associate stimuli perceived in their environment [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The results showed that the performance in the immediate recognition test was significantly above the chance level in the multisensory (M = 8.87 and SD = 1.13; t(14) = 20.2, p,.05) and classic (M = 8.13 and SD = 2.7; t(14) = 7.38, p,.05) learning methods

  • This study examined whether the addition of the haptic modality would lead adults to more efficient learning of arbitrary association between visual and auditory novel stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

It is well-known that human beings are able to associate stimuli (novel or not) perceived in their environment [1,2,3,4,5]. This type of intervention has a positive effect on reading, its acquisition generally remains slow and difficult This means several months of formal instruction are necessary before young children grasp the logic of the alphabetic principle and use it [10,11,12]. It is well-known that human beings are able to associate stimuli (novel or not) perceived in their environment. This ability is used by children in reading acquisition when arbitrary associations between visual and auditory stimuli must be learned. The study described in this paper examined whether the addition of the visuo-haptic exploration would help adults to learn more effectively the arbitrary association between visual and auditory novel stimuli

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