Irrelevant sounds can "capture" visual stimuli to change their apparent timing, a phenomenon sometimes termed "temporal ventriloquism". Here we ask whether this auditory capture can alter the time course of spatial mislocalization of visual stimuli during saccades. We first show that during saccades, sounds affect the apparent timing of visual flashes, even more strongly than during fixation. However, this capture does not affect the dynamics of perisaccadic visual distortions. Sounds presented 50 ms before or after a visual bar (that change perceived timing of the bars by more than 40 ms) had no measurable effect on the time courses of spatial mislocalization of the bars, in four subjects. Control studies showed that with barely visible, l...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
There is now considerable evidence that space is compressed when stimuli are flashed shortly before ...
Rapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent years hav...
SummaryIn temporal ventriloquism, auditory events can illusorily attract perceived timing of a visua...
A transient suppression of visual perception during saccades ensures perceptual stability. In two ex...
Brief stimuli presented near the onset of saccades are grossly mislocalized in space. In this study,...
A general problem in learning is how the brain determines what lesson to learn (and what lessons not...
International audienceThroughout the day, humans react to multisensory events conveying both visual ...
The integration of information from different senses is central to our perception of the world inclu...
To localize objects relative to ourselves, we need to combine various sensory and motor signals. Whe...
A general problem in learning is how the brain determines what lesson to learn (and what lessons not...
It is known that spatial localization of flashed objects fails around the time of rapid eye movement...
AbstractRapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent y...
It is known that spatial localization of flashed objects fails around the time of rapid eye movement...
In a previous study we quantified the effect of multisensory integration on the latency and accuracy...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
There is now considerable evidence that space is compressed when stimuli are flashed shortly before ...
Rapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent years hav...
SummaryIn temporal ventriloquism, auditory events can illusorily attract perceived timing of a visua...
A transient suppression of visual perception during saccades ensures perceptual stability. In two ex...
Brief stimuli presented near the onset of saccades are grossly mislocalized in space. In this study,...
A general problem in learning is how the brain determines what lesson to learn (and what lessons not...
International audienceThroughout the day, humans react to multisensory events conveying both visual ...
The integration of information from different senses is central to our perception of the world inclu...
To localize objects relative to ourselves, we need to combine various sensory and motor signals. Whe...
A general problem in learning is how the brain determines what lesson to learn (and what lessons not...
It is known that spatial localization of flashed objects fails around the time of rapid eye movement...
AbstractRapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent y...
It is known that spatial localization of flashed objects fails around the time of rapid eye movement...
In a previous study we quantified the effect of multisensory integration on the latency and accuracy...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
There is now considerable evidence that space is compressed when stimuli are flashed shortly before ...
Rapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent years hav...