Department of Experimental Psychology, New Radcliffe House, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX2 6BW, UK.
Crossmodal Research Laboratory, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2024 Oct;31(5):1915-1933. doi: 10.3758/s13423-023-02447-3. Epub 2024 Feb 21.
The term 'amodal' is a key topic in several different research fields across experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience, including in the areas of developmental and perception science. However, despite being regularly used in the literature, the term means something different to the researchers working in the different contexts. Many developmental scientists conceive of the term as referring to those perceptual qualities, such as, for example, the size and shape of an object, that can be picked up by multiple senses (e.g., vision and touch potentially providing information relevant to the same physical stimulus/property). However, the amodal label is also widely used in the case of those qualities that are not directly sensory, such as, for example, numerosity, rhythm, synchrony, etc. Cognitive neuroscientists, by contrast, tend to use the term amodal to refer to those central cognitive processes and brain areas that do not appear to be preferentially responsive to a particular sensory modality or to those symbolic or formal representations that essentially lack any modality and that are assumed to play a role in the higher processing of sensory information. Finally, perception scientists sometimes refer to the phenomenon of 'amodal completion', referring to the spontaneous completion of perceptual information that is missing when occluded objects are presented to observers. In this paper, we review the various different ways in which the term 'amodal' has been used in the literature and the evidence supporting the various uses of the term. Morever, we highlight some of the various properties that have been suggested to be 'amodal' over the years. Then, we try to address some of the questions that arise from the reviewed evidence, such as: Do different uses of the 'term' refer to different domains, for example, sensory information, perceptual processes, or perceptual representations? Are there any commonalities among the different uses of the term? To what extent is research on cross-modal associations (or correspondences) related to, or can shed light on, amodality? And how is the notion of amodal related to multisensory integration? Based on the reviewed evidence, it is argued that there is, as yet, no convincing empirical evidence to support the claim that amodal sensory qualities exist. We thus suggest that use of the term amodal would be more meaningful with respect to abstract cognition rather than necessarily sensory perception, the latter being more adequately explained/understood in terms of highly redundant cross-modal correspondences.
“非模态的”一词是实验心理学和认知神经科学的多个不同研究领域的一个关键主题,包括发展和感知科学领域。然而,尽管该术语在文献中经常被使用,但对于在不同背景下工作的研究人员来说,它的含义有所不同。许多发展科学家认为,这个术语指的是那些可以被多种感觉(例如视觉和触觉)捕捉到的感知属性,这些感觉提供了与同一物理刺激/属性相关的信息。然而,“非模态的”标签也广泛用于那些不是直接感觉的属性,例如数量、节奏、同步等。相比之下,认知神经科学家倾向于使用“非模态的”一词来指代那些中央认知过程和大脑区域,这些过程和区域似乎不对特定的感觉模式有偏好反应,或者对那些基本上没有任何模态的符号或形式表示有反应,而这些表示被认为在感觉信息的更高处理中发挥作用。最后,感知科学家有时会提到“非模态完成”的现象,指的是当观察者被呈现被遮挡的物体时,缺失的感知信息的自发完成。在本文中,我们回顾了文献中“非模态的”一词的各种不同用法,以及支持该术语各种用法的证据。此外,我们还强调了多年来被认为是“非模态的”的各种属性。然后,我们试图回答从审查证据中产生的一些问题,例如:不同用法的“术语”是否指的是不同的领域,例如感觉信息、感知过程或感知表示?术语的不同用法之间是否有共同点?跨模态关联(或对应)的研究在何种程度上与非模态有关,或者可以为非模态提供启示?以及非模态的概念与多感觉整合有何关系?基于审查证据,我们认为,目前还没有令人信服的经验证据支持存在非模态感觉属性的说法。因此,我们建议,“非模态的”一词的使用更有意义的是抽象认知,而不是必要的感觉感知,后者更适合用高度冗余的跨模态对应来解释/理解。