8th Annual Meeting of the International Multisensory Research Forum
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Pascal Mamassian

Auditory flutter changes the perceived speed of visual motion
Single Paper Presentation

Pascal Mamassian
CNRS & Université Paris Descartes

     Abstract ID Number: 23
     Full text: Not available
     Last modified: May 31, 2007
     Presentation date: 07/06/2007 8:40 AM in Quad General Lecture Theatre
     (View Schedule)

Abstract
Several cross-modal studies show an interaction when two modalities provide converging evidence for a given attribute, for instance an estimate of spatial location from audio-visual cues in the ventriloquist effect. Two modalities can also interact on a dimension different from that of the percept. We present here studies where the temporal frequency of an auditory signal interacts with that of a visual display, thereby leading to a change in perceived speed of the visual stimulus.

Visual stimuli were drifting Gabors where motion was produced by shifting the carrier's phase by 45deg at a rate of 7.5Hz. These visual displays were presented simultaneously with auditory stimuli consisting of amplitude modulated noise that fluttered at a rate 10% above or below that of the visual stimuli. Observers had to decide whether these test stimuli appeared to move faster or slower than stimuli whose auditory and visual temporal frequencies were identical.

The rate of the periodic auditory stimulus influenced the perceived speed of the visual display: slow auditory rate slowed down the perceived speed, and fast rate accelerated it. These results suggest that the integration between auditory and visual temporal signals occurs before the estimation of speed.

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