The Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar Ilan University, Israel.
Key Laboratory of Brain Functional Genomics (Ministry of Education), East China Normal University, Shanghai, China.
Cortex. 2022 Mar;148:14-30. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2021.11.018. Epub 2022 Jan 6.
Perceptual adaptation is often studied within a single sense. However, our experience of the world is naturally multisensory. Here, we investigated cross-sensory (visual-vestibular) adaptation of self-motion perception. It was previously found that relatively long visual self-motion stimuli (≳15 sec) are required to adapt subsequent vestibular perception, and that shorter duration stimuli do not elicit cross-sensory (visual↔vestibular) adaptation. However, it is not known whether several discrete short-duration stimuli may lead to cross-sensory adaptation (even when their sum, if presented together, would be too short to elicit cross-sensory adaptation). This would suggest that the brain monitors and adapts to supra-modal statistics of events in the environment. Here we investigated whether cross-sensory (visual↔vestibular) adaptation occurs after experiencing several short (1 sec) self-motion stimuli. Forty-five participants discriminated the headings of a series of self-motion stimuli. To expose adaptation effects, the trials were grouped in 140 batches, each comprising three 'prior' trials, with headings biased to the right or left, followed by a single unbiased 'test' trial. Right, and left-biased batches were interleaved pseudo-randomly. We found significant adaptation in both cross-sensory conditions (visual prior and vestibular test trials, and vice versa), as well as both unisensory conditions (when prior and test trials were of the same modality - either visual or vestibular). Fitting the data with a logistic regression model revealed that adaptation was elicited by the prior stimuli (not prior choices). These results suggest that the brain monitors supra-modal statistics of events in the environment, even for short-duration stimuli, leading to functional (supra-modal) adaptation of perception.
感觉适应通常在单一感觉中进行研究。然而,我们对世界的体验是自然多感官的。在这里,我们研究了自我运动感知的跨感觉(视觉-前庭)适应。以前发现,相对较长的视觉自我运动刺激(≳15 秒)需要适应后续的前庭感知,而较短的持续时间刺激不会引起跨感觉(视觉↔前庭)适应。然而,目前尚不清楚几个离散的短持续时间刺激是否会导致跨感觉适应(即使它们的总和,如果一起呈现,太短而不会引起跨感觉适应)。这表明大脑会监测和适应环境中事件的超模态统计信息。在这里,我们研究了在经历了几个短(1 秒)自我运动刺激后,是否会发生跨感觉(视觉↔前庭)适应。45 名参与者对一系列自我运动刺激的标题进行了辨别。为了暴露适应效果,试验被分为 140 组,每组包含三个“先前”试验,标题偏向右侧或左侧,然后是一个单独的无偏差“测试”试验。右侧和左侧偏向的批次以伪随机方式交错。我们在跨感觉条件(视觉先前和前庭测试试验,反之亦然)以及单感觉条件(当先前和测试试验具有相同的模态-视觉或前庭时)中都发现了显著的适应。用逻辑回归模型拟合数据表明,适应是由先前的刺激引起的(而不是先前的选择)。这些结果表明,大脑会监测环境中事件的超模态统计信息,即使是短持续时间的刺激,也会导致感知的功能(超模态)适应。