The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.

BACKGROUND: Perceived spatial intervals between successive flashes can be distorted by varying the temporal intervals between them (the "tau effect"). A previous study showed that a tau effect for visual flashes could be induced when they were accompanied by auditory beeps with varied temp...

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Main Authors: Takahiro Kawabe, Nobu Shirai, Yuji Wada, Kayo Miura, So Kanazawa, Masami K Yamaguchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2831064?pdf=render
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author Takahiro Kawabe
Nobu Shirai
Yuji Wada
Kayo Miura
So Kanazawa
Masami K Yamaguchi
author_facet Takahiro Kawabe
Nobu Shirai
Yuji Wada
Kayo Miura
So Kanazawa
Masami K Yamaguchi
author_sort Takahiro Kawabe
collection DOAJ
description BACKGROUND: Perceived spatial intervals between successive flashes can be distorted by varying the temporal intervals between them (the "tau effect"). A previous study showed that a tau effect for visual flashes could be induced when they were accompanied by auditory beeps with varied temporal intervals (an audiovisual tau effect). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted two experiments to investigate whether the audiovisual tau effect occurs in infancy. Forty-eight infants aged 5-8 months took part in this study. In Experiment 1, infants were familiarized with audiovisual stimuli consisting of three pairs of two flashes and three beeps. The onsets of the first and third pairs of flashes were respectively matched to those of the first and third beeps. The onset of the second pair of flashes was separated from that of the second beep by 150 ms. Following the familiarization phase, infants were exposed to a test stimulus composed of two vertical arrays of three static flashes with different spatial intervals. We hypothesized that if the audiovisual tau effect occurred in infancy then infants would preferentially look at the flash array with spatial intervals that would be expected to be different from the perceived spatial intervals between flashes they were exposed to in the familiarization phase. The results of Experiment 1 supported this hypothesis. In Experiment 2, the first and third beeps were removed from the familiarization stimuli, resulting in the disappearance of the audiovisual tau effect. This indicates that the modulation of temporal intervals among flashes by beeps was essential for the audiovisual tau effect to occur (Experiment 2). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest that the cross-modal processing that underlies the audiovisual tau effect occurs even in early infancy. In particular, the results indicate that audiovisual modulation of temporal intervals emerges by 5-8 months of age.
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spelling doaj.art-fe19cd17c13e4fac917d3e694b6225852022-12-22T01:48:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-01-0153e950310.1371/journal.pone.0009503The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.Takahiro KawabeNobu ShiraiYuji WadaKayo MiuraSo KanazawaMasami K YamaguchiBACKGROUND: Perceived spatial intervals between successive flashes can be distorted by varying the temporal intervals between them (the "tau effect"). A previous study showed that a tau effect for visual flashes could be induced when they were accompanied by auditory beeps with varied temporal intervals (an audiovisual tau effect). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted two experiments to investigate whether the audiovisual tau effect occurs in infancy. Forty-eight infants aged 5-8 months took part in this study. In Experiment 1, infants were familiarized with audiovisual stimuli consisting of three pairs of two flashes and three beeps. The onsets of the first and third pairs of flashes were respectively matched to those of the first and third beeps. The onset of the second pair of flashes was separated from that of the second beep by 150 ms. Following the familiarization phase, infants were exposed to a test stimulus composed of two vertical arrays of three static flashes with different spatial intervals. We hypothesized that if the audiovisual tau effect occurred in infancy then infants would preferentially look at the flash array with spatial intervals that would be expected to be different from the perceived spatial intervals between flashes they were exposed to in the familiarization phase. The results of Experiment 1 supported this hypothesis. In Experiment 2, the first and third beeps were removed from the familiarization stimuli, resulting in the disappearance of the audiovisual tau effect. This indicates that the modulation of temporal intervals among flashes by beeps was essential for the audiovisual tau effect to occur (Experiment 2). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest that the cross-modal processing that underlies the audiovisual tau effect occurs even in early infancy. In particular, the results indicate that audiovisual modulation of temporal intervals emerges by 5-8 months of age.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2831064?pdf=render
spellingShingle Takahiro Kawabe
Nobu Shirai
Yuji Wada
Kayo Miura
So Kanazawa
Masami K Yamaguchi
The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.
PLoS ONE
title The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.
title_full The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.
title_fullStr The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.
title_full_unstemmed The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.
title_short The audiovisual tau effect in infancy.
title_sort audiovisual tau effect in infancy
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2831064?pdf=render
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