Cognitive Neuroscience Department and Cognitive Interaction Technology-Center of Excellence, Bielefeld University, 33615 Bielefeld, Germany.
Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, 72076 Tübingen, Germany.
Nat Commun. 2016 Jun 6;7:11543. doi: 10.1038/ncomms11543.
The brain efficiently processes multisensory information by selectively combining related signals across the continuous stream of multisensory inputs. To do so, it needs to detect correlation, lag and synchrony across the senses; optimally integrate related information; and dynamically adapt to spatiotemporal conflicts across the senses. Here we show that all these aspects of multisensory perception can be jointly explained by postulating an elementary processing unit akin to the Hassenstein-Reichardt detector-a model originally developed for visual motion perception. This unit, termed the multisensory correlation detector (MCD), integrates related multisensory signals through a set of temporal filters followed by linear combination. Our model can tightly replicate human perception as measured in a series of empirical studies, both novel and previously published. MCDs provide a unified general theory of multisensory processing, which simultaneously explains a wide spectrum of phenomena with a simple, yet physiologically plausible model.
大脑通过有选择地将相关信号组合在连续的多感官输入流中,从而高效地处理多感官信息。为此,它需要检测感官之间的相关性、滞后和同步;最优地整合相关信息;并动态适应感官之间的时空冲突。在这里,我们表明,通过假设类似于海森斯坦-里夏特探测器的基本处理单元——最初用于视觉运动感知的模型,可以共同解释多感官感知的所有这些方面。这个单元,称为多感官相关检测器(MCD),通过一组时间滤波器和线性组合来整合相关的多感官信号。我们的模型可以紧密复制人类感知,这些感知是通过一系列新的和以前发表的经验研究来衡量的。MCD 提供了一种统一的多感官处理的一般理论,它同时用一个简单但生理上合理的模型来解释广泛的现象。