Effects of multisensory integration on exogenous attention. Multisensory
integration acts on exogenous attention indirectly or directly. The indirect
manner (a) can be observed when the exogenous cueing paradigm and
an attentional/perceptual load are applied. As illustrated here, a
non-predictive peripheral cue appears; this cue consists of the presentation of
auditory stimuli from the two speakers located to the left or right of the
monitor, the presentation of visual stimuli within the dashed squares on the
monitor, or presentation of audiovisual stimuli. The target is presented in one
of the corners of the display (as indicated by the dashed circles). In the
no-load condition (a: left panel), the participants were asked to complete a
target elevation discrimination task, i.e., to report whether the target
appeared at the top or bottom of the screen. In the high-load condition (a:
right panel), the participants were asked to complete not only the target
elevation discrimination task but also a center RSVP task in which they were
required to detect a digit among distractor letters. (b)
Consequently, in the no-load condition, all types of cues can capture attention
and elicit significant spatial cueing effects; however, in the high-load
condition, only the audiovisual cue elicits a significant spatial cueing effect
(Santangelo and Spence, 2007). The
direct manner (c) can be observed when the visual search paradigm
is applied. In this paradigm, visual search displays were presented in two
dashed circles. The distractor lines changed orientation, and one of them
changed into the target line, i.e., the vertical or horizontal line. The
participants were asked to discriminate the orientation of the target, i.e.,
vertical or horizontal. The visual target orientation change was accompanied
(AV) or not accompanied (V) by an irrelevant auditory stimulus. (d)
Consequently (Van der Burg et al.,
2011), the responses in the AV condition were found to be more accurate
than those in the V condition, and the ERP amplitude elicited in the AV
condition differed from the sum of those elicited by the unimodal auditory and
visual stimuli (A+V). Further, the value of [AV−(A+V)] that was
calculated during the 50–60 ms post-stimulus epoch was significantly
correlated (p<.05) with the improvements in behavioral accuracy (AV vs.
V). Adapted with permission from the corresponding authors (Santangelo and Spence, 2007) [Copyright
2007 by the American Psychological Association] and (Van der Burg et al., 2011) [© 2010 Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.]