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Biol Psychol ; 142: 132-139, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30685414

ABSTRACT

Multisensory integration (MSI) is crucial for human communication and social interaction and has been investigated in healthy populations and neurodevelopmental disorders. However, the use of stimuli with high ecological validity is sparse, especially in event-related potential (ERP) studies. The present study examined the ERP correlates of MSI in healthy adults using short (500 ms) ecologically valid professional actor-produced emotions of fear or disgust as vocal exclamation or facial expression (unimodal conditions) or both (bimodal condition). Behaviourally, our results show a general visual dominance effect (similarly fast responses following bimodal and visual stimuli) and an MSI-related speedup of responses only for fear. Electrophysiologically, both P100 and N170 showed MSI-related amplitude increases only following fear, but not disgust stimuli. Our results show for the first time that the known differential neural processing of fear and disgust also holds for the integration of dynamic auditory and visual information.


Subject(s)
Disgust , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Fear/physiology , Signal Detection, Psychological/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation/methods , Adult , Ecological and Environmental Phenomena , Emotions/physiology , Facial Expression , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Male , Patient Simulation , Photic Stimulation/methods , Reaction Time , Voice , Young Adult
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