posted on 2019-08-26, 06:39authored byNoelle R.B. Stiles, Armand R. Tanguay, Jr., Shinsuke Shimojo
In the original double flash illusion, a visual flash (e.g., a
sharp-edged disk, or uniformly filled circle) presented with two short auditory
tones (beeps) is often followed by an illusory flash. The illusory flash has
been previously shown to be triggered by the second auditory beep. The current
study extends the double flash illusion by showing that this paradigm can not
only create the illusory repeat of an on-off flash, but also trigger an
illusory expansion (and in some cases a subsequent contraction) that is induced
by the flash of a circular brightness gradient (gradient disk) to replay as
well. The perception of the dynamic double flash illusion further supports the
interpretation of the illusory flash (in the double flash illusion) as similar
in its spatial and temporal properties to the perception of the real visual flash, likely by replicating
the neural processes underlying the illusory expansion of the real flash. We
show further that if a gradient disk (generating an illusory expansion) and a
sharp-edged disk are presented simultaneously side by side with two sequential
beeps, often only one visual stimulus or the other will be perceived to double
flash. This indicates selectivity in auditory-visual binding, suggesting the
usefulness of this paradigm as a psychophysical tool for investigating
crossmodal binding phenomena.