Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3046489 Clinical Neurophysiology 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to investigate in healthy adults the electrophysiological correlates of auditory–visual interactions involved in perception of bimodal events in a no-task paradigm.MethodsEvent-related potentials were recorded in response to unimodal auditory (A), unimodal visual (V) and bimodal (AV) stimuli. Cross-modal interactions were estimated using the additive [AV − (A + V)] model.ResultsThe spatio-temporal analysis of ERPs and scalp current densities revealed several interaction patterns occurring at both early and late stages of sensory cortical processing: (1) amplitude decrease of the unimodal auditory N1 wave as early as 55 ms, (2) amplitude increase of the unimodal auditory P2 wave from 150 to 195 ms concomitant with new neural activity over the right fronto-temporal region, and (3) amplitude increase of the late unimodal visual response within 245–350 ms post-stimulus.ConclusionsOur study provides evidence that several patterns of cross-modal interactions can be generated even if no task is required from subjects.SignificanceThe paradigm used here can thus be utilized for studying the maturation of the cross-modal processes in young children and in children with pathological development.

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