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Abstract
Almost all decisions in everyday life rely on multiple sensory inputs that can come from common or independent causes. These situations invoke perceptual uncertainty about environmental properties and the signals' causal structure. Using the audiovisual McGurk illusion, this study investigated how observers formed perceptual and causal confidence judgements in information integration tasks under causal uncertainty. Observers were presented with spoken syllables, their corresponding articulatory lip movements or their congruent and McGurk combinations (e.g. auditory B/P with visual G/K). Observers reported their perceived auditory syllable, the causal structure and confidence for each judgement. Observers were more accurate and confident on congruent than unisensory trials. Their perceptual and causal confidence were tightly related over trials as predicted by the interactive nature of perceptual and causal inference. Further, observers assigned comparable perceptual and causal confidence to veridical 'G/K' percepts on audiovisual congruent trials and their causal and perceptual metamers on McGurk trials (i.e. illusory 'G/K' percepts). Thus, observers metacognitively evaluate the integrated audiovisual percept with limited access to the conflicting unisensory stimulus components on McGurk trials. Collectively, our results suggest that observers form meaningful perceptual and causal confidence judgements about multisensory scenes that are qualitatively consistent with principles of Bayesian causal inference. This article is part of the theme issue 'Decision and control processes in multisensory perception'.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 20220348 |
Journal | Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences |
Volume | 378 |
Issue number | 1886 |
Early online date | 7 Aug 2023 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 25 Sept 2023 |
Bibliographical note
FundingThis research was funded by the ERC starting grant ('multsens'). D.M. is currently supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF, ZK-66, ‘Dynamates’).
Keywords
- Humans
- Illusions
- Auditory Perception
- Speech Perception
- Visual Perception
- Metacognition
- Bayes Theorem
- Photic Stimulation
- Acoustic Stimulation
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- 1 Finished
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FP7_ ERC: MultSens
Noppeney, U. (Principal Investigator)
European Commission, European Commission - Management Costs
1/05/13 → 30/04/19
Project: Research