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Related Concept Videos

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Related Experiment Video

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Cross-Modal Multivariate Pattern Analysis
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Global and local priming in a multi-modal context.

Alexandra List1

  • 1Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Program, Hamilton College, Clinton, NY, United States.

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
|March 17, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Recent experience can bias attention to local or global information. This study found that cross-modal interactions do not create level-specific priming between visual and auditory attention, and surprisingly eliminated within-modality priming.

Keywords:
auditioncross-modal processinggloballocalprimingvision

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Multisensory processing

Background:

  • Attentional selection operates across multiple scales (local/global).
  • Level-specific priming effects demonstrate experience-based attentional biases within modalities.
  • Cross-modal interactions in attention are not fully understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate cross-modal level-specific priming between visual and auditory attention.
  • Determine if visual attentional scope influences auditory attention and vice versa.
  • Examine the impact of a multi-modal context on within-modality priming.

Main Methods:

  • Participants performed visual and auditory tasks involving hierarchical stimuli.
  • Visual and auditory stimuli were presented in a multi-modal context.
  • Level-specific priming and identity priming effects were measured.

Main Results:

  • Identity priming effects were observed as expected.
  • No cross-modal level-specific priming effects were found.
  • Multi-modal context eliminated within-modality level-specific priming.

Conclusions:

  • Cross-modal interactions do not appear to support level-specific priming.
  • Multi-modal environments may disrupt established attentional scope biases.
  • Attentional scope persistence is reduced when switching between modalities.