8th Annual Meeting of the International Multisensory Research Forum
    Home > Papers > Ehsan Arabzadeh
Ehsan Arabzadeh

The pedestal effect of vision on touch
Single Paper Presentation

Ehsan Arabzadeh
School of Psychology, University of Sydney

Colin Clifford
School of Psychology, University of Sydney

Justin Harris
School of Psychology, University of Sydney

     Abstract ID Number: 35
     Full text: Not available
     Last modified: March 5, 2007
     Presentation date: 07/05/2007 11:30 AM in Quad General Lecture Theatre
     (View Schedule)

Abstract
In order to construct a coherent percept of the world, our brain continuously combines information across multiple sensory modalities. However, early sensory processing is usually assumed to be unimodal where the activity in one system has little if any influence on another. Early sensory processing is described as a transducer function with a sigmoid shape converting the stimulus into neuronal response. Because of its sigmoid shape, a transducer function exhibits an accelerating nonlinearity at low stimulus values (near detection threshold) and a compressive nonlinearity for higher stimulus values. This feature gives rise to the “pedestal effect” – an improvement in the stimulus detectability when a low baseline value is added to it. We first investigated the pedestal effect within the tactile modality. Using a 2-alternative-forced-choice detection (or discrimination) paradigm, we measured the subjects’ just-noticeable-difference (JND) threshold for vibrations with different amplitudes. Each of the four subjects tested showed an effect of pedestal with the lowest JND thresholds for pedestal values around threshold. We then studied the transfer of the pedestal effect from vision to touch. Results showed that a visual pedestal can in fact facilitate the detection of a tactile vibration.

Research
Support Tool
  For this 
refereed conference abstract
Capture Cite
View Metadata
Printer Friendly
Context
Author Bio
Define Terms
Related Studies
Media Reports
Google Search
Action
Email Author
Email Others
Add to Portfolio



    Learn more
    about this
    publishing
    project...


Public Knowledge

 
Open Access Research
home | overview | program
papers | organization | schedule | links
  Top