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The influence of rhythm on detection of auditory and vibrotactile asynchrony

Andrew P. Lauzon, Frank Russo, Laurence R. Harris

2020Experimental Brain Research10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The perception of an event is strongly influenced by the context in which it occurs. Here, we examined the effect of a rhythmic context on detection of asynchrony in both the auditory and vibrotactile modalities. Using the method of constant stimuli and a two-alternative forced choice (2AFC), participants were presented with pairs of pure tones played either simultaneously or with various levels of stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA). Target stimuli in both modalities were nested within either: (i) a regularly occurring, predictable rhythm (ii) an irregular, unpredictable rhythm, or (iii) no rhythm at all. Vibrotactile asynchrony detection had higher thresholds and showed greater variability than auditory asynchrony detection in general. Asynchrony detection thresholds for auditory targets but not vibrotactile targets were significantly reduced when the target stimulus was embedded in a regular rhythm as compared to no rhythm. Embedding within an irregular rhythm produced no such improvement. The observed modality asymmetries are interpreted with regard to the superior temporal resolution of the auditory system and specialized brain circuitry supporting auditory-motor coupling.

Topics & Concepts

RhythmStimulus onset asynchronyAsynchrony (computer programming)Stimulus (psychology)PsychologyPerceptionAudiologyAuditory perceptionNeuroscienceCommunicationCognitive psychologyComputer scienceMedicineAcousticsPhysicsAsynchronous communicationComputer networkNeuroscience and Music PerceptionMultisensory perception and integrationHearing Loss and Rehabilitation