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Auditory-visual multisensory interactions in humans: Timing, topography, directionality, and sources
- Source :
- Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 30, no. 38, pp. 12572-12580, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Current models of brain organization include multisensory interactions at early processing stages and within low-level, including primary, cortices. Embracing this model with regard to auditory-visual (AV) interactions in humans remains problematic. Controversy surrounds the application of an additive model to the analysis of event-related potentials (ERPs), and conventional ERP analysis methods have yielded discordant latencies of effects and permitted limited neurophysiologic interpretability. While hemodynamic imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation studies provide general support for the above model, the precise timing, superadditive/subadditive directionality, topographic stability, and sources remain unresolved. We recorded ERPs in humans to attended, but task-irrelevant stimuli that did not require an overt motor response, thereby circumventing paradigmatic caveats. We applied novel ERP signal analysis methods to provide details concerning the likely bases of AV interactions. First, nonlinear interactions occur at 60-95 ms after stimulus and are the consequence of topographic, rather than pure strength, modulations in the ERP. AV stimuli engage distinct configurations of intracranial generators, rather than simply modulating the amplitude of unisensory responses. Second, source estimations (and statistical analyses thereof) identified primary visual, primary auditory, and posterior superior temporal regions as mediating these effects. Finally, scalar values of current densities in all of these regions exhibited functionally coupled, subadditive nonlinear effects, a pattern increasingly consistent with the mounting evidence in nonhuman primates. In these ways, we demonstrate how neurophysiologic bases of multisensory interactions can be noninvasively identified in humans, allowing for a synthesis across imaging methods on the one hand and species on the other. Copyright © 2010 the authors.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Superadditivity
Speech perception
Adolescent
medicine.medical_treatment
Electroencephalography
Stimulus (physiology)
Brain mapping
050105 experimental psychology
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
medicine
Humans
Directionality
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Evoked Potentials
Brain Mapping
Neuroscience (all)
medicine.diagnostic_test
General Neuroscience
Superior colliculus
05 social sciences
Brain
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
Articles
Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Acoustic Stimulation
Auditory Perception
Visual Perception
Female
Evoked Potential
Nerve Net
Auditory Perception/physiology
Brain/physiology
Evoked Potentials/physiology
Nerve Net/physiology
Photic Stimulation
Visual Perception/physiology
Psychology
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Human
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 30, no. 38, pp. 12572-12580, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....91d539fea36290d23e912c21e945aff5