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Context dependency of time-based event-related expectations for different modalities.
Ball, Felix; Andreca, Julia; Noesselt, Toemme.
Affiliation
  • Ball F; Department of Biological Psychology, Faculty of Natural Science, Otto-Von-Guericke-University, PO Box 4120, 39106, Magdeburg, Germany. Felix.Ball@ovgu.de.
  • Andreca J; Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, Otto-Von-Guericke-University, Magdeburg, Germany. Felix.Ball@ovgu.de.
  • Noesselt T; Department of Biological Psychology, Faculty of Natural Science, Otto-Von-Guericke-University, PO Box 4120, 39106, Magdeburg, Germany.
Psychol Res ; 86(4): 1239-1251, 2022 Jun.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34319439
ABSTRACT
Expectations about the temporal occurrence of events (when) are often tied with the expectations about certain event-related properties (what and where) happening at these time points. For instance, slowly waking up in the morning we expect our alarm clock to go off; however, the longer we do not hear it the more likely we already missed it. However, most current evidence for complex time-based event-related expectations (TBEEs) is based on the visual modality. Here we tested whether implicit TBEEs can act cross-modally. To this end, visual and auditory stimulus streams were presented which contained early and late targets embedded among distractors (to maximise temporal target uncertainty). Foreperiod-modality-contingencies were manipulated run-wise visual targets either occurred early in 80% of trials and auditory targets occurred late in 80% of trials or vice versa. Participants showed increased sensitivity for expected auditory early/visual late targets which increased over time while the opposite pattern was observed for visual early/auditory late targets. A benefit in reaction times was only found for auditory early trials. Together, this pattern of results suggests that implicit context-dependent TBEEs for auditory targets after short foreperiods (be they correct or not) dominated and determined which modality became more expected at the late position irrespective of the veridical statistical regularity. Hence, TBEEs in cross-modal and uncertain environments are context-dependent, shaped by the dominant modality in temporal tasks (i.e., auditory) and only boost performance cross-modally when expectations about the event after the short foreperiod match with the run-wise context (i.e., auditory early/visual late).
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Auditory Perception / Motivation Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Psychol Res Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Germany Publication country: ALEMANHA / ALEMANIA / DE / DEUSTCHLAND / GERMANY

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Auditory Perception / Motivation Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Psychol Res Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Germany Publication country: ALEMANHA / ALEMANIA / DE / DEUSTCHLAND / GERMANY