Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7294879 | International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Recent research has shown that the magnitudes of responses to multisensory information are highly dependent on the stimulus structure. The temporal proximity of multiple signal inputs is a critical determinant for cross-modal integration. Here, we investigated the influence that temporal asynchrony has on audiovisual integration in both younger and older adults using event-related potentials (ERP). Our results showed that in the simultaneous audiovisual condition, except for the earliest integration (80-110Â ms), which occurred in the occipital region for older adults was absent for younger adults, early integration was similar for the younger and older groups. Additionally, late integration was delayed in older adults (280-300Â ms) compared to younger adults (210-240Â ms). In auditionâleading vision conditions, the earliest integration (80-110Â ms) was absent in younger adults but did occur in older adults. Additionally, after increasing the temporal disparity from 50Â ms to 100Â ms, late integration was delayed in both younger (from 230 to 290Â ms to 280-300Â ms) and older (from 210 to 240Â ms to 280-300Â ms) adults. In the audition-lagging vision conditions, integration only occurred in the A100V condition for younger adults and in the A50V condition for older adults. The current results suggested that the audiovisual temporal integration pattern differed between the auditionâleading and audition-lagging vision conditions and further revealed the varying effect of temporal asynchrony on audiovisual integration in younger and older adults.
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Authors
Yanna Ren, Yanling Ren, Weiping Yang, Xiaoyu Tang, Fengxia Wu, Qiong Wu, Satoshi Takahashi, Yoshimichi Ejima, Jinglong Wu,