Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
937423 Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 2016 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Endogenous attentional selectivity modulates multisensory performance improvements.•Multisensory templates exert top-down control on contingent attentional capture.•Multisensory integration acts to generate exogenous orienting of spatial attention.•Multisensory integration facilitates search efficiency.•Cross-modal spread of attention can occur in a multisensory object.

Stimuli from multiple sensory organs can be integrated into a coherent representation through multiple phases of multisensory processing; this phenomenon is called multisensory integration. Multisensory integration can interact with attention. Here, we propose a framework in which attention modulates multisensory processing in both endogenous (goal-driven) and exogenous (stimulus-driven) ways. Moreover, multisensory integration exerts not only bottom-up but also top-down control over attention. Specifically, we propose the following: (1) endogenous attentional selectivity acts on multiple levels of multisensory processing to determine the extent to which simultaneous stimuli from different modalities can be integrated; (2) integrated multisensory events exert top-down control on attentional capture via multisensory search templates that are stored in the brain; (3) integrated multisensory events can capture attention efficiently, even in quite complex circumstances, due to their increased salience compared to unimodal events and can thus improve search accuracy; and (4) within a multisensory object, endogenous attention can spread from one modality to another in an exogenous manner.

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