6th Annual Meeting of the International Multisensory Research Forum
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Jordi Navarra

Exposure to asynchronous audiovisual speech extends the temporal window for audiovisual integration
Poster Presentation

Jordi Navarra
Facultat de Psicologia i Parc Científic de Barcelona, Universitat de Barcelona

Argiro Vatakis
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford

Massimiliano Zampini
Università degli Studi di Trento

Salvador Soto-Faraco
Facultat de Psicologia i Parc Científic de Barcelona, Universitat de Barcelona

Charles Spence
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford

     Abstract ID Number: 128
     Full text: Not available
     Last modified: March 21, 2005

Abstract
We examined whether monitoring asynchronous audiovisual speech induces a general temporal recalibration of auditory and visual sensory processing. Participants monitored a videotape of a person pronouncing a list of words (Experiment 1) or of a hand playing a musical pattern on a piano (Experiment 2). The audio and video channels were presented either in synchrony, or else asynchronously (with the visual signal leading the auditory signal by 300 ms). Participants were asked to judge the temporal order of pairs of auditory (white noise bursts) and visual stimuli (flashes) that were presented at varying stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs) during the experimental session. The results showed that, while monitoring desynchronized speech or music, participants required a longer interval between the auditory and visual stimuli in order to perceive their temporal order correctly, suggesting a widening of the temporal window for audiovisual integration. The fact that no such recalibration occurred when we used longer asynchronies (1000 ms) that exceeded the temporal window for the audiovisual integration (Experiment 3) supports this conclusion.

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