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Journal article

Multisensory temporal order judgments: when two locations are better than one.

Abstract:
In Experiment 1, participants were presented with pairs of stimuli (one visual and the other tactile) from the left and/or right of fixation at varying stimulus onset asynchronies and were required to make unspeeded temporal order judgments (TOJs) regarding which modality was presented first. When the participants adopted an uncrossed-hands posture, just noticeable differences (JNDs) were lower (i.e., multisensory TOJs were more precise) when stimuli were presented from different positions, rather than from the same position. This spatial redundancy benefit was reduced when the participants adopted a crossed-hands posture, suggesting a failure to remap visuotactile space appropriately. In Experiment 2, JNDs were also lower when pairs of auditory and visual stimuli were presented from different positions, rather than from the same position. Taken together, these results demonstrate that people can use redundant spatial cues to facilitate their performance on multisensory TOJ tasks and suggest that previous studies may have systematically overestimated the precision with which people can make such judgments. These results highlight the intimate link between spatial and temporal factors in determining our perception of the multimodal objects and events in the world around us.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.3758/bf03194803

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Journal:
Perception and psychophysics More from this journal
Volume:
65
Issue:
2
Pages:
318-328
Publication date:
2003-02-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1532-5962
ISSN:
0031-5117


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:15987
UUID:
uuid:edc0167c-2f75-4bb5-83fb-9a9f85628430
Local pid:
pubs:15987
Source identifiers:
15987
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

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