posted on 2021-05-26, 07:19authored bySophie Rohlf, Patrick Bruns, Brigitte Röder
<p>Reliability-based cue combination is
a hallmark of multisensory integration, while the role of cue reliability for crossmodal recalibration is less
understood. The present study investigated whether visual cue reliability
affects audiovisual recalibration in
adults and children. Participants had to localize sounds, which were
presented either alone or in combination with a spatially discrepant high- or
low-reliability visual stimulus. In a previous study we had shown that the ventriloquist
effect (indicating multisensory integration) was overall larger in the children
groups and that the shift in sound localization toward the spatially discrepant
visual stimulus decreased with visual cue reliability in all groups. The
present study replicated the onset of the immediate ventriloquist aftereffect (a
shift in unimodal sound localization following a single exposure of a spatially discrepant audiovisual
stimulus) at the age of 6–7 years. In adults the immediate
ventriloquist aftereffect depended on visual cue reliability, whereas the
cumulative ventriloquist aftereffect (reflecting the audiovisual spatial discrepancies over the complete
experiment) did not. In 6–7-year-olds the immediate ventriloquist aftereffect was
independent of visual cue reliability. The present results are compatible with
the idea of immediate and cumulative crossmodal recalibrations being
dissociable processes and that the immediate ventriloquist aftereffect is more
closely related to genuine multisensory integration.</p>