Audiovisual interactions outside of visual awareness during motion adaptation

Author:

Park Minsun1ORCID,Blake Randolph2ORCID,Kim Chai-Youn1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Korea University , 145, Anam-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 02841, Republic of Korea

2. Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University , PMB 407817 2301 Vanderbilt Place, Nashville, TN 37240-7817, United States

Abstract

Abstract Motion aftereffects (MAEs), illusory motion experienced in a direction opposed to real motion experienced during prior adaptation, have been used to assess audiovisual interactions. In a previous study from our laboratory, we demonstrated that a congruent direction of auditory motion presented concurrently with visual motion during adaptation strengthened the consequent visual MAE, compared to when auditory motion was incongruent in direction. Those judgments of MAE strength, however, could have been influenced by expectations or response bias from mere knowledge of the state of audiovisual congruity during adaptation. To prevent such knowledge, we now employed continuous flash suppression to render visual motion perceptually invisible during adaptation, ensuring that observers were completely unaware of visual adapting motion and only aware of the motion direction of the sound they were hearing. We found a small but statistically significant congruence effect of sound on adaptation strength produced by invisible adaptation motion. After considering alternative explanations for this finding, we conclude that auditory motion can impact the strength of visual processing produced by translational visual motion even when that motion transpires outside of awareness.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Vanderbilt University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Clinical Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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