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The Duration of a Co-Occurring Sound Modulates Visual Detection Performance in Humans

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  • Benjamin de Haas
  • Roberto Cecere
  • Harriet Cullen
  • Jon Driver
  • Vincenzo Romei

Abstract

Background: The duration of sounds can affect the perceived duration of co-occurring visual stimuli. However, it is unclear whether this is limited to amodal processes of duration perception or affects other non-temporal qualities of visual perception. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we tested the hypothesis that visual sensitivity - rather than only the perceived duration of visual stimuli - can be affected by the duration of co-occurring sounds. We found that visual detection sensitivity (d’) for unimodal stimuli was higher for stimuli of longer duration. Crucially, in a cross-modal condition, we replicated previous unimodal findings, observing that visual sensitivity was shaped by the duration of co-occurring sounds. When short visual stimuli (∼24 ms) were accompanied by sounds of matching duration, visual sensitivity was decreased relative to the unimodal visual condition. However, when the same visual stimuli were accompanied by longer auditory stimuli (∼60–96 ms), visual sensitivity was increased relative to the performance for ∼24 ms auditory stimuli. Across participants, this sensitivity enhancement was observed within a critical time window of ∼60–96 ms. Moreover, the amplitude of this effect correlated with visual sensitivity enhancement found for longer lasting visual stimuli across participants. Conclusions/Significance: Our findings show that the duration of co-occurring sounds affects visual perception; it changes visual sensitivity in a similar way as altering the (actual) duration of the visual stimuli does.

Suggested Citation

  • Benjamin de Haas & Roberto Cecere & Harriet Cullen & Jon Driver & Vincenzo Romei, 2013. "The Duration of a Co-Occurring Sound Modulates Visual Detection Performance in Humans," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 8(1), pages 1-8, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0054789
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054789
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Ladan Shams & Yukiyasu Kamitani & Shinsuke Shimojo, 2000. "What you see is what you hear," Nature, Nature, vol. 408(6814), pages 788-788, December.
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