4.6 Article

Multisensory Interactions between Auditory and Haptic Object Recognition

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 1097-1107

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhs076

Keywords

auditory perception; functional magnetic resonance imaging; multisensory interactions; object recognition; touch perception

Categories

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung, BMBF) [01GW0562]
  2. Janggen-Pohn Stiftung
  3. Jubilaumsstiftung der Basellandschaftlichen Kantonalbank
  4. BMBF
  5. ROSSI, Emergence of communication in RObots through Sensorimotor and Social Interaction [216125]
  6. Lundbeck Foundation [R59 A5399]
  7. Lundbeck Foundation [R59-2010-5399] Funding Source: researchfish

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Object manipulation produces characteristic sounds and causes specific haptic sensations that facilitate the recognition of the manipulated object. To identify the neural correlates of audio-haptic binding of object features, healthy volunteers underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while they matched a target object to a sample object within and across audition and touch. By introducing a delay between the presentation of sample and target stimuli, it was possible to dissociate haptic-to-auditory and auditory-to-haptic matching. We hypothesized that only semantically coherent auditory and haptic object features activate cortical regions that host unified conceptual object representations. The left fusiform gyrus (FG) and posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS) showed increased activation during crossmodal matching of semantically congruent but not incongruent object stimuli. In the FG, this effect was found for haptic-to-auditory and auditory-to-haptic matching, whereas the pSTS only displayed a crossmodal matching effect for congruent auditory targets. Auditory and somatosensory association cortices showed increased activity during crossmodal object matching which was, however, independent of semantic congruency. Together, the results show multisensory interactions at different hierarchical stages of auditory and haptic object processing. Object-specific crossmodal interactions culminate in the left FG, which may provide a higher order convergence zone for conceptual object knowledge.

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