Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Spring 4-2008
Journal / Book Title
Perception & Psychophysics
Abstract
Cross-modal facilitation of response time (RT) is said to occur in a selective attention task when the introduction of an irrelevant sound increases the speed at which visual stimuli are detected and identified. To investigate the source of the facilitation in RT, we asked participants to rapidly identify the color of lights in the quiet and when accompanied by a pulse of noise. The resulting measures of accuracy and RT were used to derive speed-accuracy trade-off functions (SATFs) separately for the noise and the no-noise conditions. The two resulting SATFs have similar slopes and intercepts and, thus, can be treated as overlapping segments of a single function. That speeded identification of color with and without the presence of noise can be described by one SATF suggests, in turn, that cross-modal facilitation of RT represents a change in decision criterion induced by the auditory stimulus. Analogous changes in decision criteria might also underlie other measures of cross-modal interactions, such as auditory enhancement of brightness judgments.
DOI
DOI: 10.3758/PP.70.3.412
MSU Digital Commons Citation
Arieh, Yoav and Marks, Lawrence E., "Cross-modal interaction between vision and hearing: A speed—accuracy analysis" (2008). Department of Psychology Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works. 26.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/psychology-facpubs/26
Published Citation
Arieh, Yoav, and Lawrence E. Marks. "Cross-modal interaction between vision and hearing: A speed—accuracy analysis." Perception & Psychophysics 70, no. 3 (2008): 412-421.
Included in
Behavioral Neurobiology Commons, Clinical Psychology Commons, Cognitive Neuroscience Commons, Health Psychology Commons, Human Factors Psychology Commons, Nervous System Commons, Other Neuroscience and Neurobiology Commons, Sense Organs Commons, Speech and Hearing Science Commons, Speech Pathology and Audiology Commons, Systems Neuroscience Commons