7th Annual Meeting of the International Multisensory Research Forum
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Virginie van Wassenhove

Statistical learning of auditory-visual associations
Single Paper Presentation

Virginie van Wassenhove
Psychology, UCLA - Biology, CalTech

Aaron Seitz
Psychology, Boston University

Ladan Shams
Psychology, UCLA

     Abstract ID Number: 162
     Full text: Not available
     Last modified: March 19, 2006
     Presentation date: 06/19/2006 8:30 AM in Hamilton Building, McNeil Theatre
     (View Schedule)

Abstract
Statistical learning refers to the implicit learning of stimulus associations and has been independently reported for visual, auditory and tactile sensory modalities. Here, we tested whether such learning can be observed for synthetic auditory-visual pairings. Joint and conditional probabilities were tested on different groups of participants using a rapid-serial presentation (RSP) paradigm. During the experiment, participants were first exposed to (passively observed) the stimuli. In the second phase of the experiment, participants were presented with ‘singles’ (one auditory or visual stimulus), ‘doublets’ (two stimuli, unimodal or bimodal) or quartets (pairs of bimodal stimuli) in a two-interval forced choice paradigm. They were asked to determine the interval whose stimulus was most frequently occurring during the exposure period. We examined the effects of (i) stimulus duration in the RSP procedure, (ii) joint probability, and (iii) conditional probability on statistical learning. Our results suggest that audio-visual statistical learning occur naturally despite the absence of a task or of an explicit attentional engagement. Additionally, bimodal statistical learning is more efficient than unimodal learning across all stimulus durations.

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