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Melodic sound enhances visual awareness of congruent musical notes, but only if you can read music

Identifieur interne : 000460 ( Pmc/Checkpoint ); précédent : 000459; suivant : 000461

Melodic sound enhances visual awareness of congruent musical notes, but only if you can read music

Auteurs : Minyoung Lee [Corée du Sud] ; Randolph Blake [Corée du Sud] ; Sujin Kim [Corée du Sud] ; Chai-Youn Kim [Corée du Sud]

Source :

RBID : PMC:4500286

Abstract

Significance

When left and right eyes disagree about what is being viewed, the brain resolves the disagreement by compromise: Visual awareness alternates between the two eyes’ views over time. Called “binocular rivalry,” these alternations in awareness are widely thought to reveal the usually implicit inferential nature of visual processing. In this study, we found that the perceptual dynamics defining rivalry are influenced by abstract, relational properties between visual and auditory sequences comprising musical melodies. However, this bisensory interaction impacts only the amount of time a visual sequence dominates awareness, with audiovisual interaction being powerless to hasten a visual sequence’s emergence from invisibility into awareness. These findings situate the inferential processing putatively transpiring during rivalry prior to extraction of abstract, semantic information.


Url:
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1509529112
PubMed: 26077907
PubMed Central: 4500286


Affiliations:


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PMC:4500286

Le document en format XML

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<country xml:lang="fr">Corée du Sud</country>
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<title>Significance</title>
<p>When left and right eyes disagree about what is being viewed, the brain resolves the disagreement by compromise: Visual awareness alternates between the two eyes’ views over time. Called “binocular rivalry,” these alternations in awareness are widely thought to reveal the usually implicit inferential nature of visual processing. In this study, we found that the perceptual dynamics defining rivalry are influenced by abstract, relational properties between visual and auditory sequences comprising musical melodies. However, this bisensory interaction impacts only the amount of time a visual sequence dominates awareness, with audiovisual interaction being powerless to hasten a visual sequence’s emergence from invisibility into awareness. These findings situate the inferential processing putatively transpiring during rivalry prior to extraction of abstract, semantic information.</p>
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<journal-id journal-id-type="iso-abbrev">Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A</journal-id>
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<title-group>
<article-title>Melodic sound enhances visual awareness of congruent musical notes, but only if you can read music</article-title>
<alt-title alt-title-type="short">Hearing melody influences seeing melody</alt-title>
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<sup>a</sup>
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<sup>b</sup>
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<sup>c</sup>
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<sup>1</sup>
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<sup>a</sup>
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<sup>a</sup>
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Department of Psychology,
<institution>Korea University</institution>
, Seoul 136701,
<country>Korea</country>
;</aff>
<aff id="aff2">
<sup>b</sup>
Department of Psychological Sciences, Vanderbilt Vision Research Center,
<institution>Vanderbilt University</institution>
, Nashville,
<addr-line>TN</addr-line>
37240;</aff>
<aff id="aff3">
<sup>c</sup>
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences,
<institution>Seoul National University</institution>
, Seoul 151742,
<country>Korea</country>
</aff>
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<author-notes>
<corresp id="cor1">
<sup>1</sup>
To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email:
<email>randolph.blake@vanderbilt.edu</email>
or
<email>chaikim@korea.ac.kr</email>
.</corresp>
<fn fn-type="edited-by">
<p>Contributed by Randolph Blake, May 14, 2015 (sent for review April 15, 2015; reviewed by David C. Burr and Sheng He)</p>
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<fn fn-type="con">
<p>Author contributions: M.L., R.B., and C.-Y.K. designed research; M.L., R.B., S.K., and C.-Y.K. performed research; M.L. and S.K. analyzed data; and M.L., R.B., S.K., and C.-Y.K. wrote the paper.</p>
</fn>
<fn fn-type="con">
<p>Reviewers: D.C.B., University of Florence; and S.H., University of Minnesota.</p>
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<issue>27</issue>
<fpage>8493</fpage>
<lpage>8498</lpage>
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<license-p>Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.</license-p>
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<abstract abstract-type="executive-summary">
<title>Significance</title>
<p>When left and right eyes disagree about what is being viewed, the brain resolves the disagreement by compromise: Visual awareness alternates between the two eyes’ views over time. Called “binocular rivalry,” these alternations in awareness are widely thought to reveal the usually implicit inferential nature of visual processing. In this study, we found that the perceptual dynamics defining rivalry are influenced by abstract, relational properties between visual and auditory sequences comprising musical melodies. However, this bisensory interaction impacts only the amount of time a visual sequence dominates awareness, with audiovisual interaction being powerless to hasten a visual sequence’s emergence from invisibility into awareness. These findings situate the inferential processing putatively transpiring during rivalry prior to extraction of abstract, semantic information.</p>
</abstract>
<abstract>
<p>Predictive influences of auditory information on resolution of visual competition were investigated using music, whose visual symbolic notation is familiar only to those with musical training. Results from two experiments using different experimental paradigms revealed that melodic congruence between what is seen and what is heard impacts perceptual dynamics during binocular rivalry. This bisensory interaction was observed only when the musical score was perceptually dominant, not when it was suppressed from awareness, and it was observed only in people who could read music. Results from two ancillary experiments showed that this effect of congruence cannot be explained by differential patterns of eye movements or by differential response sluggishness associated with congruent score/melody combinations. Taken together, these results demonstrate robust audiovisual interaction based on high-level, symbolic representations and its predictive influence on perceptual dynamics during binocular rivalry.</p>
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