Title of article :
Filling-in visual motion with sounds
Author/Authors :
Vنljamنe، نويسنده , , A. and Soto-Faraco، نويسنده , , S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
6
From page :
249
To page :
254
Abstract :
Information about the motion of objects can be extracted by multiple sensory modalities, and, as a consequence, object motion perception typically involves the integration of multi-sensory information. Often, in naturalistic settings, the flow of such information can be rather discontinuous (e.g. a cat racing through the furniture in a cluttered room is partly seen and partly heard). This study addressed audio-visual interactions in the perception of time-sampled object motion by measuring adaptation after-effects. We found significant auditory after-effects following adaptation to unisensory auditory and visual motion in depth, sampled at 12.5 Hz. The visually induced (cross-modal) auditory motion after-effect was eliminated if visual adaptors flashed at half of the rate (6.25 Hz). Remarkably, the addition of the high-rate acoustic flutter (12.5 Hz) to this ineffective, sparsely time-sampled, visual adaptor restored the auditory after-effect to a level comparable to what was seen with high-rate bimodal adaptors (flashes and beeps). Our results suggest that this auditory-induced reinstatement of the motion after-effect from the poor visual signals resulted from the occurrence of sound-induced illusory flashes. This effect was found to be dependent both on the directional congruency between modalities and on the rate of auditory flutter. The auditory filling-in of time-sampled visual motion supports the feasibility of using reduced frame rate visual content in multisensory broadcasting and virtual reality applications.
Keywords :
Vision , multisensory integration , Motion after-effect , Audition
Journal title :
Acta Psychologica
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Acta Psychologica
Record number :
1904064
Link To Document :
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