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Cross-modal effects of value on perceptual acuity and stimulus encoding.


ABSTRACT: Cross-modal interactions are very common in perception. An important feature of many perceptual stimuli is their reward-predicting properties, the utilization of which is essential for adaptive behavior. What is unknown is whether reward associations in one sensory modality influence perception of stimuli in another modality. Here we show that auditory stimuli with high-reward associations increase the sensitivity of visual perception, even when sounds and reward associations are both irrelevant for the visual task. This increased sensitivity correlates with a change in stimulus representation in the visual cortex, indexed by increased multivariate decoding accuracy in simultaneously acquired functional MRI data. Univariate analysis showed that reward associations modulated responses in regions associated with multisensory processing in which the strength of modulation was a better predictor of the magnitude of the behavioral effect than the modulation in classical reward regions. Our findings demonstrate a value-driven cross-modal interaction that affects perception and stimulus encoding, with a resemblance to well-described modulatory effects of attention. We suggest that multisensory processing areas may mediate the transfer of value signals across senses.

SUBMITTER: Pooresmaeili A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4210286 | biostudies-other | 2014 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Cross-modal effects of value on perceptual acuity and stimulus encoding.

Pooresmaeili Arezoo A   FitzGerald Thomas H B TH   Bach Dominik R DR   Toelch Ulf U   Ostendorf Florian F   Dolan Raymond J RJ  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20141006 42


Cross-modal interactions are very common in perception. An important feature of many perceptual stimuli is their reward-predicting properties, the utilization of which is essential for adaptive behavior. What is unknown is whether reward associations in one sensory modality influence perception of stimuli in another modality. Here we show that auditory stimuli with high-reward associations increase the sensitivity of visual perception, even when sounds and reward associations are both irrelevant  ...[more]

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