Expectations about dynamic visual objects facilitates early sensory processing of congruent sounds
In everyday life, the perception of a moving object can lead to the expectation of an object’s sound, yet little is known about how visual expectations influence early auditory processing. We examined how dynamic visual input – an object moving continuously across the visual field – influences early...
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Zusammenfassung: | In everyday life, the perception of a moving object can lead to the expectation of an object’s sound, yet little is known about how visual expectations influence early auditory processing. We examined how dynamic visual input – an object moving continuously across the visual field – influences early auditory processing of a sound that is either congruent with the object’s motion, and thus likely perceived as being part of the visual object, or incongruent with the object’s motion. In Experiment 1, EEG activity was recorded from 29 adults who passively viewed a ball that appeared either on the far left or right boundary of a display and continuously traversed along the horizontal midline to make contact and elicit a bounce sound off the opposite boundary. Our main analysis focused on the auditory-evoked event-related potential. For audio-visual (AV) trials, a knocking sound accompanied the visual input the moment the ball made contact with the opposite boundary (AV-synchronous), or the sound occurred shortly before contact (AV-asynchronous). We also included audio-only and visual-only trials. For Experiment 1, AV-synchronous sounds elicited an earlier and attenuated auditory response relative to AV-asynchronous or audio-only events. Experiment 2 was conducted to examine the roles of expectancy and multisensory integration in influencing this early auditory response. In addition to the audio-only, AV-synchronous, and AV-asynchronous conditions, 19 adults were shown a ball that became visually occluded prior to reaching the boundary of the display, but elicited an expected knocking sound at the point of occluded collision. Here, the auditory response during the AV-occluded condition resembled the AV-synchronous condition, suggesting that expectations induced by a moving object can influence early auditory processing. Broadly, the results suggest that dynamic visual stimuli can help generate expectations about the timing of auditory events, which then facilitates the processing of auditory information that matches these expectations. Each version of this online data repository reflects revisions made to the manuscript post-peer review. The EEG/ERP data attached (.set/.fdt files) were processed in MATLAB using EEGLAB/ERPLAB software. These files can be found in the "Segmented ERP Data" folder. EEG/ERP data were processed using the scripts contained within the "EEG ERP Scripts (MATLAB)" folder. The EEG data were processed using the specifications outlined below. |
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DOI: | 10.17632/k3j772tmwk |