Iordanescu Lucica, Guzman-Martinez Emmanuel, Grabowecky Marcia, Suzuki Satoru
Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2008 Jun;15(3):548-54. doi: 10.3758/pbr.15.3.548.
In a natural environment, objects that we look for often make characteristic sounds. A hiding cat may meow, or the keys in the cluttered drawer may jingle when moved. Using a visual search paradigm, we demonstrated that characteristic sounds facilitated visual localization of objects, even when the sounds carried no location information. For example, finding a cat was faster when participants heard a meow sound. In contrast, sounds had no effect when participants searched for names rather than pictures of objects. For example, hearing "meow" did not facilitate localization of the word cat. These results suggest that characteristic sounds cross-modally enhance visual (rather than conceptual) processing of the corresponding objects. Our behavioral demonstration of object-based cross-modal enhancement complements the extensive literature on space-based cross-modal interactions. When looking for your keys next time, you might want to play jingling sounds.
在自然环境中,我们寻找的物体常常会发出独特的声音。一只躲起来的猫可能会喵喵叫,或者杂乱抽屉里的钥匙被移动时会发出叮当声。我们使用视觉搜索范式证明,即使声音不携带位置信息,独特的声音也能促进物体的视觉定位。例如,当参与者听到喵喵声时,找到猫的速度会更快。相比之下,当参与者搜索物体的名称而非图片时,声音没有影响。例如,听到“喵喵”声并不会促进对“猫”这个单词的定位。这些结果表明,独特的声音以跨模态方式增强了对相应物体的视觉(而非概念)处理。我们基于物体的跨模态增强的行为演示补充了关于基于空间的跨模态交互的大量文献。下次找钥匙时,你可能想播放叮当声。