4.5 Article

Are surface properties integrated into visuohaptic object representations?

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 31, Issue 10, Pages 1882-1888

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2010.07204.x

Keywords

cross-modal; multisensory; texture; touch; vision

Categories

Funding

  1. National Eye Institute
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. Veterans Administration
  4. National Science Foundation [0450303, 1-66-606-63]
  5. Emory University
  6. Direct For Education and Human Resources
  7. Division Of Human Resource Development [0450303] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Object recognition studies have almost exclusively involved vision, focusing on shape rather than surface properties such as color. Visual object representations are thought to integrate shape and color information because changing the color of studied objects impairs their subsequent recognition. However, little is known about integration of surface properties into visuohaptic multisensory representations. Here, participants studied objects with distinct patterns of surface properties (color in Experiment 1, texture in Experiments 2 and 3) and had to discriminate between object shapes when color or texture schemes were altered in within-modal (visual and haptic) and cross-modal (visual study followed by haptic test and vice versa) conditions. In Experiment 1, color changes impaired within-modal visual recognition but had no effect on cross-modal recognition, suggesting that the multisensory representation was not influenced by modality-specific surface properties. In Experiment 2, texture changes impaired recognition in all conditions, suggesting that both unisensory and multisensory representations integrated modality-independent surface properties. However, the cross-modal impairment might have reflected either the texture change or a failure to form the multisensory representation. Experiment 3 attempted to distinguish between these possibilities by combining changes in texture with changes in orientation, taking advantage of the known view-independence of the multisensory representation, but the results were not conclusive owing to the overwhelming effect of texture change. The simplest account is that the multisensory representation integrates shape and modality-independent surface properties. However, more work is required to investigate this and the conditions under which multisensory integration of structural and surface properties occurs.

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