Article

Audio-visual synchrony and spatial attention enhance processing of dynamic visual stimulation independently and in parallel: A frequency-tagging study

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Citation

Covic A, Keitel C, Porcu E, Schröger E & Müller MM (2017) Audio-visual synchrony and spatial attention enhance processing of dynamic visual stimulation independently and in parallel: A frequency-tagging study. NeuroImage, 161, pp. 32-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.08.022

Abstract
The neural processing of a visual stimulus can be facilitated by attending to its position or by a co-occurring auditory tone. Using frequency-tagging, we investigated whether facilitation by spatial attention and audio-visual synchrony rely on similar neural processes. Participants attended to one of two flickering Gabor patches (14.17 and 17 Hz) located in opposite lower visual fields. Gabor patches further “pulsed” (i.e. showed smooth spatial frequency variations) at distinct rates (3.14 and 3.63 Hz). Frequency-modulating an auditory stimulus at the pulse-rate of one of the visual stimuli established audio-visual synchrony. Flicker and pulsed stimulation elicited stimulus-locked rhythmic electrophysiological brain responses that allowed tracking the neural processing of simultaneously presented Gabor patches. These steady-state responses (SSRs) were quantified in the spectral domain to examine visual stimulus processing under conditions of synchronous vs. asynchronous tone presentation and when respective stimulus positions were attended vs. unattended. Strikingly, unique patterns of effects on pulse- and flicker driven SSRs indicated that spatial attention and audiovisual synchrony facilitated early visual processing in parallel and via different cortical processes. We found attention effects to resemble the classical top-down gain effect facilitating both, flicker and pulse-driven SSRs. Audio-visual synchrony, in turn, only amplified synchrony-producing stimulus aspects (i.e. pulse-driven SSRs) possibly highlighting the role of temporally co-occurring sights and sounds in bottom-up multisensory integration.

Keywords
Spatial attention; Selective attention; Multisensory integration; Audio-visual synchrony; Brain oscillation; Neural rhythm; Steady-state response (SSR); EEG; Brain-computer interface (BCI)

Journal
NeuroImage: Volume 161

StatusPublished
FundersDeutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publication date01/11/2017
Publication date online09/08/2017
Date accepted by journal06/08/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/30269
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN1053-8119

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