Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Curious Incident of Attention in Multisensory Integration: Bottom-up vs. Top-down

View through CrossRef
The role attention plays in our experience of a coherent, multisensory world is still controversial. On the one hand, a subset of inputs may be selected for detailed processing and multisensory integration in a top-down manner, i.e., guidance of multisensory integration by attention. On the other hand, stimuli may be integrated in a bottom-up fashion according to low-level properties such as spatial coincidence, thereby capturing attention. Moreover, attention itself is multifaceted and can be describedviaboth top-down and bottom-up mechanisms. Thus, the interaction between attention and multisensory integration is complex and situation-dependent. The authors of this opinion paper are researchers who have contributed to this discussion from behavioural, computational and neurophysiological perspectives. We posed a series of questions, the goal of which was to illustrate the interplay between bottom-up and top-down processes in various multisensory scenarios in order to clarify the standpoint taken by each author and with the hope of reaching a consensus. Although divergence of viewpoint emerges in the current responses, there is also considerable overlap: In general, it can be concluded that the amount of influence that attention exerts on MSI depends on the current task as well as prior knowledge and expectations of the observer. Moreover stimulus properties such as the reliability and salience also determine how open the processing is to influences of attention.
Title: The Curious Incident of Attention in Multisensory Integration: Bottom-up vs. Top-down
Description:
The role attention plays in our experience of a coherent, multisensory world is still controversial.
On the one hand, a subset of inputs may be selected for detailed processing and multisensory integration in a top-down manner, i.
e.
, guidance of multisensory integration by attention.
On the other hand, stimuli may be integrated in a bottom-up fashion according to low-level properties such as spatial coincidence, thereby capturing attention.
Moreover, attention itself is multifaceted and can be describedviaboth top-down and bottom-up mechanisms.
Thus, the interaction between attention and multisensory integration is complex and situation-dependent.
The authors of this opinion paper are researchers who have contributed to this discussion from behavioural, computational and neurophysiological perspectives.
We posed a series of questions, the goal of which was to illustrate the interplay between bottom-up and top-down processes in various multisensory scenarios in order to clarify the standpoint taken by each author and with the hope of reaching a consensus.
Although divergence of viewpoint emerges in the current responses, there is also considerable overlap: In general, it can be concluded that the amount of influence that attention exerts on MSI depends on the current task as well as prior knowledge and expectations of the observer.
Moreover stimulus properties such as the reliability and salience also determine how open the processing is to influences of attention.

Related Results

Task switching costs contribute to the apparent speeding of multisensory reaction times
Task switching costs contribute to the apparent speeding of multisensory reaction times
Abstract Faster reaction times for the detection of multisensory compared to unisensory stimuli are considered a hallmark of multisensory integration. While this mu...
The effect of multisensory semantic congruency on unisensory object recognition in schizophrenia
The effect of multisensory semantic congruency on unisensory object recognition in schizophrenia
Multisensory, as opposed to unisensory processing of stimuli, has been found to enhance the performance (e.g., reaction time, accuracy, and discrimination) of healthy individuals a...
Sensory Loss Enhances Multisensory Integration Performance
Sensory Loss Enhances Multisensory Integration Performance
ABSTRACT Auditory and visual sensory loss has repeatedly been shown to alter abilities in remaining sensory modalities. It is, however, unclear whether sensory loss...
Development of Multisensory Processing in Ferret Parietal Cortex.
Development of Multisensory Processing in Ferret Parietal Cortex.
It is well known that the nervous system adjusts itself to its environment during development. Although a great deal of effort has been directed toward understanding the developmen...
Perception
Perception
Perception: A Multisensory Perspective examines multisensory interactions as the key process behind how we perceive our own body, control its movements, perceive and recognize obje...
Audiovisual Speech Perception and the McGurk Effect
Audiovisual Speech Perception and the McGurk Effect
Research on visual and audiovisual speech information has profoundly influenced the fields of psycholinguistics, perception psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. Visual speech fi...
Statin Use, Incident Dementia and Alzheimer Disease in Elderly African Americans
Statin Use, Incident Dementia and Alzheimer Disease in Elderly African Americans
<p><strong>Objective: </strong>To investigate the association between statin use, incident dementia, and Alzheimer disease (AD) in a prospective elderly African A...

Back to Top