Predictable variations in auditory pitch modulate the spatial processing of visual stimuli: An ERP study

Fátima Vera-Constán, Irune Fernández-Prieto, Joel García-Morera, J. Navarra
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Abstract

We investigated whether perceiving predictable ‘ups and downs’ in acoustic pitch (as can be heard in musical melodies) can influence the spatial processing of visual stimuli as a consequence of a ‘spatial recoding’ of sound (see Foster and Zatorre, 2010; Rusconi et al., 2006). Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while participants performed a color discrimination task of a visual target that could appear either above or below a centrally-presented fixation point. Each experimental trial started with an auditory isochronous stream of 11 tones including a high- and a low-pitched tone. The visual target appeared isochronously after the last tone. In the ‘non-predictive’ condition, the tones were presented in an erratic fashion (e.g., ‘high-low-low-high-high-low-high …’). In the ‘predictive condition’, the melodic combination of high- and low-pitched tones was highly predictable (e.g., ‘low-high-low-high-low …’). Within the predictive condition, the visual stimuli appeared congruently or incongruently with respect to the melody (‘… low-high-low-high-low-UP’ or ‘… low-high-low-high-low-DOWN’, respectively). Participants showed faster responses when the visual target appeared after a predictive melody. Electrophysiologically, early (25–150 ms) amplitude effects of predictability were observed in frontal and parietal regions, spreading to central regions (N1) afterwards. Predictability effects were also found in the P2–N2 complex and the P3 in central and parietal regions. Significant auditory-to-visual congruency effects were also observed in the parieto-occipital P3 component. Our findings reveal the existence of crossmodal effects of perceiving auditory isochronous melodies on visual temporal orienting. More importantly, our results suggest that pitch information can be transformed into a spatial code that shapes the spatial processing in other modalities such as vision.
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听觉音调的可预测变化调节视觉刺激的空间加工:一项ERP研究
我们研究了能否通过声音的“空间重新编码”来感知可预测的音高“起伏”(就像在音乐旋律中听到的那样),从而影响视觉刺激的空间处理(见Foster和Zatorre, 2010;Rusconi et al., 2006)。当参与者对一个可能出现在中央注视点上方或下方的视觉目标进行颜色辨别任务时,记录了事件相关电位(ERPs)。每个实验都以11个音调的听觉同步流开始,包括一个高音和一个低音。在最后一个音调之后,视觉目标同步出现。在“非预测性”条件下,音调以不稳定的方式呈现(例如,“高-低-低-高-高-低-高……”)。在“预测条件”中,高音和低音的旋律组合是高度可预测的(例如,“低-高-低-高-低……”)。在预测条件下,视觉刺激与旋律一致或不一致(分别是“…低-高-低-高-低-上”或“…低-高-低-低-下”)。当视觉目标在预测旋律后出现时,参与者表现出更快的反应。电生理学上,可预测性的早期(25-150 ms)振幅效应在额叶和顶叶区域被观察到,随后扩散到中央区域(N1)。在P2-N2复合体以及中部和顶叶区的P3中也发现了可预测性效应。在顶枕P3部分也观察到显著的听觉视觉一致性效应。我们的研究结果揭示了听觉等时性旋律感知对视觉时间定向存在跨模效应。更重要的是,我们的研究结果表明,音高信息可以转化为空间编码,从而影响视觉等其他方式的空间处理。
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Seeing and Perceiving
Seeing and Perceiving BIOPHYSICS-PSYCHOLOGY
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