Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals

We report an experiment designed to examine whether individuals who are overweight would perform differently when trying to detect and/or discriminate auditory, vibrotactile, and audiotactile targets. The vibrotactile stimuli were delivered either to the participant's abdomen or to his hand. Th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wan, X, Spence, C, Mu, B, Zhou, X, Ho, C
Formato: Journal article
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Verlag 2014
_version_ 1826304049207574528
author Wan, X
Spence, C
Mu, B
Zhou, X
Ho, C
author_facet Wan, X
Spence, C
Mu, B
Zhou, X
Ho, C
author_sort Wan, X
collection OXFORD
description We report an experiment designed to examine whether individuals who are overweight would perform differently when trying to detect and/or discriminate auditory, vibrotactile, and audiotactile targets. The vibrotactile stimuli were delivered either to the participant's abdomen or to his hand. Thirty-six young male participants were classified into normal, underweight, or overweight groups based on their body mass index. All three groups exhibited a significant benefit of multisensory (over the best of the unisensory) stimulation, but the magnitude of this benefit was modulated by the weight of the participant, the task, and the location from which the vibrotactile stimuli happened to be presented. For the detection task, the overweight group exhibited a significantly smaller benefit than the underweight group. In the discrimination task, the overweight group showed significantly more benefits than the other two groups when the vibrotactile stimuli were delivered to their hands, but not when the stimuli were delivered to their abdomens. These results might raise some interesting questions regarding the mechanisms underlying audiotactile information processing and have applied relevance for the design of the most effective warning signal (e.g., for drivers). © 2014 Springer-Verlag.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:11:56Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:efcfdb8f-5bd4-41b2-a430-c3f94e484e1d
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:11:56Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Springer Verlag
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:efcfdb8f-5bd4-41b2-a430-c3f94e484e1d2022-03-27T11:42:57ZAssessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individualsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:efcfdb8f-5bd4-41b2-a430-c3f94e484e1dEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordSpringer Verlag2014Wan, XSpence, CMu, BZhou, XHo, CWe report an experiment designed to examine whether individuals who are overweight would perform differently when trying to detect and/or discriminate auditory, vibrotactile, and audiotactile targets. The vibrotactile stimuli were delivered either to the participant's abdomen or to his hand. Thirty-six young male participants were classified into normal, underweight, or overweight groups based on their body mass index. All three groups exhibited a significant benefit of multisensory (over the best of the unisensory) stimulation, but the magnitude of this benefit was modulated by the weight of the participant, the task, and the location from which the vibrotactile stimuli happened to be presented. For the detection task, the overweight group exhibited a significantly smaller benefit than the underweight group. In the discrimination task, the overweight group showed significantly more benefits than the other two groups when the vibrotactile stimuli were delivered to their hands, but not when the stimuli were delivered to their abdomens. These results might raise some interesting questions regarding the mechanisms underlying audiotactile information processing and have applied relevance for the design of the most effective warning signal (e.g., for drivers). © 2014 Springer-Verlag.
spellingShingle Wan, X
Spence, C
Mu, B
Zhou, X
Ho, C
Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
title Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
title_full Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
title_fullStr Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
title_short Assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
title_sort assessing the benefits of multisensory audiotactile stimulation for overweight individuals
work_keys_str_mv AT wanx assessingthebenefitsofmultisensoryaudiotactilestimulationforoverweightindividuals
AT spencec assessingthebenefitsofmultisensoryaudiotactilestimulationforoverweightindividuals
AT mub assessingthebenefitsofmultisensoryaudiotactilestimulationforoverweightindividuals
AT zhoux assessingthebenefitsofmultisensoryaudiotactilestimulationforoverweightindividuals
AT hoc assessingthebenefitsofmultisensoryaudiotactilestimulationforoverweightindividuals