منابع مشابه
Sound can suppress visual perception
In a single modality, the percept of an input (e.g., voices of neighbors) is often suppressed by another (e.g., the sound of a car horn nearby) due to close interactions of neural responses to these inputs. Recent studies have also suggested that close interactions of neural responses could occur even across sensory modalities, especially for audio-visual interactions. However, direct behaviora...
متن کاملTactile stimulation can suppress visual perception
An input (e.g., airplane takeoff sound) to a sensory modality can suppress the percept of another input (e.g., talking voices of neighbors) of the same modality. This perceptual suppression effect is evidence that neural responses to different inputs closely interact with each other in the brain. While recent studies suggest that close interactions also occur across sensory modalities, crossmod...
متن کامل3d Sound Can Have a Negative Impact on the Perception of Visual Content in Audiovisual Reproductions
There is reason to believe that sound interacts with visual attention mechanisms. Practical implications of that interaction have never been analyzed in the context of spatial sound design for audiovisual reproduction. The study reported here aimed to test if sound spatialization could affect eye movements and the processing of visual events in audiovisual scenes. We presented participants with...
متن کاملSound can prolong the visible persistence of moving visual objects
An abrupt change in a visual attribute (size) of apparently moving visual stimuli extends the time the changed stimuli is visible even after its physical termination (visible persistence). In this study, we show that elongation of visible persistence is enhanced by an abrupt change in an attribute (frequency) of the sounds presented along with the size-changed apparently moving visual stimuli. ...
متن کاملCross-Modal Effects on Perception 1 Seeing Sound: Changing Visual Perception Through Cross-Modal Interaction
A single flash of light accompanied by a series of beeps gives the impression of flickering (Shams, Kamitani, & Shimojo, 2000). Thus, an unambiguous visual stimulus appears different when paired with an auditory stimulus. Similarly, with a flashing pattern, we find that beeps can increase or decrease perceived number of flashes. Furthermore, the perceived number or flashes can either improve or...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Scientific Reports
سال: 2015
ISSN: 2045-2322
DOI: 10.1038/srep10483