Different senses have different processing times. Here we measured the perceived timing of galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) relative to tactile, visual and auditory stimuli. Simple reaction times for perceived head movement (438 +/- 49 ms) were significantly longer than to touches (245 +/- 14 ms), lights (220 +/- 13 ms), or sounds (197 +/- 13 ms). Temporal order and simultaneity judgments both indicated that GVS had to occur about 160 ms before other stimuli to be perceived as simultaneous with them. This lead was significantly less than the relative timing predicted by reaction time differences compatible with an incomplete tendency to compensate for differences in processing times
Many events from daily life are audiovisual (AV). Handclaps produce both visual and acoustic signals...
Perceived time is not veridical but distorted and differs across the senses. Here we ask, which poin...
Sensory modalities do not act in isolation; they can influence one another. One intriguing example i...
In contrast to other senses, the latency of vestibular sensation has not been well investigated. We ...
Different senses have different processing times. The consequences of this have been explored in the...
Multisensory stimuli originating from the same event can be perceived asynchronously due to differen...
Involuntary physical responses to vestibular stimulation are very fast. The vestibulo-ocular reflex,...
Involuntary physical responses to vestibular stimulation are very fast. The vestibulo-ocular reflex,...
The brain can know about an active head movement even in advance of its execution by means of an eff...
The perception of simultaneity between auditory and vestibular information is crucially important fo...
The perception of simultaneity between auditory and vestibular information is crucially important fo...
The experiments reported within this thesis use psychophysical techniques to examine the factors whi...
Crossmodal stimuli can be perceived as being simultaneous even if they are not physically synchronou...
Abstract The perception of simultaneity between audi-tory and vestibular information is crucially im...
Tactile stimulation usually occurs as a combination of an active movement (reaching out to touch a s...
Many events from daily life are audiovisual (AV). Handclaps produce both visual and acoustic signals...
Perceived time is not veridical but distorted and differs across the senses. Here we ask, which poin...
Sensory modalities do not act in isolation; they can influence one another. One intriguing example i...
In contrast to other senses, the latency of vestibular sensation has not been well investigated. We ...
Different senses have different processing times. The consequences of this have been explored in the...
Multisensory stimuli originating from the same event can be perceived asynchronously due to differen...
Involuntary physical responses to vestibular stimulation are very fast. The vestibulo-ocular reflex,...
Involuntary physical responses to vestibular stimulation are very fast. The vestibulo-ocular reflex,...
The brain can know about an active head movement even in advance of its execution by means of an eff...
The perception of simultaneity between auditory and vestibular information is crucially important fo...
The perception of simultaneity between auditory and vestibular information is crucially important fo...
The experiments reported within this thesis use psychophysical techniques to examine the factors whi...
Crossmodal stimuli can be perceived as being simultaneous even if they are not physically synchronou...
Abstract The perception of simultaneity between audi-tory and vestibular information is crucially im...
Tactile stimulation usually occurs as a combination of an active movement (reaching out to touch a s...
Many events from daily life are audiovisual (AV). Handclaps produce both visual and acoustic signals...
Perceived time is not veridical but distorted and differs across the senses. Here we ask, which poin...
Sensory modalities do not act in isolation; they can influence one another. One intriguing example i...