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Primary and multisensory cortical activity is correlated with audiovisual percepts

✍ Scribed by Margo McKenna Benoit; Tommi Raij; Fa-Hsuan Lin; Iiro P. Jääskeläinen; Steven Stufflebeam


Book ID
102846152
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
514 KB
Volume
31
Category
Article
ISSN
1065-9471

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Incongruent auditory and visual stimuli can elicit audiovisual illusions such as the McGurk effect where visual /ka/ and auditory /pa/ fuse into another percept such as/ta/. In the present study, human brain activity was measured with adaptation functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate which brain areas support such audiovisual illusions. Subjects viewed trains of four movies beginning with three congruent /pa/ stimuli to induce adaptation. The fourth stimulus could be (i) another congruent /pa/, (ii) a congruent /ka/, (iii) an incongruent stimulus that evokes the McGurk effect in susceptible individuals (lips /ka/ voice /pa/), or (iv) the converse combination that does not cause the McGurk effect (lips /pa/ voice/ ka/). This paradigm was predicted to show increased release from adaptation (i.e. stronger brain activation) when the fourth movie and the related percept was increasingly different from the three previous movies. A stimulus change in either the auditory or the visual stimulus from /pa/ to /ka/ (iii, iv) produced within‐modality and cross‐modal responses in primary auditory and visual areas. A greater release from adaptation was observed for incongruent non‐McGurk (iv) compared to incongruent McGurk (iii) trials. A network including the primary auditory and visual cortices, nonprimary auditory cortex, and several multisensory areas (superior temporal sulcus, intraparietal sulcus, insula, and pre‐central cortex) showed a correlation between perceiving the McGurk effect and the fMRI signal, suggesting that these areas support the audiovisual illusion. Hum Brain Mapp, 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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