Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation

Debats N, Heuer H, Kayser C (2023)
European Journal of Neuroscience.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 2.29 MB
Abstract / Bemerkung
Perceptual coherence in the face of discrepant multisensory signals is achieved via the processes of multisensory integration, recalibration and sometimes motor adaptation. These supposedly operate on different time scales, with integration reducing immediate sensory discrepancies and recalibration and motor adaptation reflecting the cumulative influence of their recent history. Importantly, whether discrepant signals are bound during perception is guided by the brains' inference of whether they originate from a common cause. When combined, these two notions lead to the hypothesis that the time scales on which integration and recalibration (or motor adaptation) operate are associated with different time scales of evidence about a common cause underlying two signals. We tested this prediction in a well-established visuo-motor paradigm, in which human participants performed visually guided hand movements. The kinematic correlation between hand and cursor movements indicates their common origin, which allowed us to manipulate the common-cause evidence by titrating this correlation. Specifically, we dissociated hand and cursor signals during individual movements while preserving their correlation across the series of movement endpoints. Following our hypothesis, this manipulation reduced integration compared with a condition in which visual and proprioceptive signals were perfectly correlated. In contrast, recalibration and motor adaption were not affected by this manipulation. This supports the notion that multisensory integration and recalibration deal with sensory discrepancies on different time scales guided by common-cause evidence: Integration is prompted by local common-cause evidence and reduces immediate discrepancies, whereas recalibration and motor adaptation are prompted by global common-cause evidence and reduce persistent discrepancies.
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
European Journal of Neuroscience
ISSN
0953-816X
eISSN
1460-9568
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2981134

Zitieren

Debats N, Heuer H, Kayser C. Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation. European Journal of Neuroscience. 2023.
Debats, N., Heuer, H., & Kayser, C. (2023). Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation. European Journal of Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.16095
Debats, Nienke, Heuer, Herbert, and Kayser, Christoph. 2023. “Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation”. European Journal of Neuroscience.
Debats, N., Heuer, H., and Kayser, C. (2023). Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation. European Journal of Neuroscience.
Debats, N., Heuer, H., & Kayser, C., 2023. Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation. European Journal of Neuroscience.
N. Debats, H. Heuer, and C. Kayser, “Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation”, European Journal of Neuroscience, 2023.
Debats, N., Heuer, H., Kayser, C.: Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation. European Journal of Neuroscience. (2023).
Debats, Nienke, Heuer, Herbert, and Kayser, Christoph. “Different time scales of common‐cause evidence shape multisensory integration, recalibration and motor adaptation”. European Journal of Neuroscience (2023).
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung-Nicht kommerziell 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2023-07-21T06:26:55Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
dcccb74265314d1d94e9c1a81199649a


Link(s) zu Volltext(en)
Access Level
OA Open Access

Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 37461244
PubMed | Europe PMC

Preprint: 10.1101/2023.01.27.525820

Suchen in

Google Scholar