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   *Sound adds speed to visual perception* **

*The traditional view of individual brain areas involved in perception of
different sensory stimuli—i.e., one brain region involved in hearing and
another involved in seeing—has been thrown into doubt in recent years. A new
study published in the online open access journal BMC Neuroscience, shows
that, in monkeys, the region involved in hearing can directly improve
perception in the visual region, without the involvement of other structures
to integrate the senses.
*
Integration of sensory stimuli has traditionally been thought of as
hierarchical, involving brain areas that receive signals from distinct areas
of the brain layer known as the cortex that recognise different stimuli. But
the recent finding of nerve cells projecting from the auditory cortex
(associated with the perception of sound) directly into the visual cortex
(associated with sight), suggest that perception of one sense might affect
that of another without the involvement of higher brain areas.

"Auditory or visual–auditory responses in the primary visual cortex are
highly probable given the presence of direct projections from the primary
auditory cortex", explain P. Barone and colleagues from the Centre for Brain
and Cognition Research, Toulouse, France. "We looked for modulation of the
neuronal visual responses in the primary visual cortex by auditory stimuli
in an awake monkey."

The researchers recorded the neuronal responses with microelectrodes
inserted directly into the primary visual cortex of a rhesus macaque. The
monkey was then required to orient its gaze towards a visual stimulus. The
time taken for the neurons in the visual cortex to respond to the stimulus,
or latency, was recorded. Barone and colleagues then measured the latency
when the visual stimulus was accompanied by a sound emanating from the same
spot. When the visual signal was strong—i.e., high contrast—the auditory
stimulus did not affect latency; however, if the visual signal was
weaker—i.e., low contrast—latency decreased by 5-10%, suggesting that in
some way the auditory stimulus speeds up the response to the visual
stimulus.

"Our findings show that single neurons from one primary sensory cortex can
integrate information from another sensory modality", the researchers claim.
They propose that the auditory cue is processed more quickly than the visual
stimulus, and because the monkeys have learned to associate that sound and
sight, the visual cortex is primed to perceive the weaker signal. "Our
results argue against a strict hierarchical model of sensory integration in
the brain and that integration of multiple senses should be added to the
list of functions of the primary visual cortex."

Source: BioMed Central
http://www.physorg.com/news137743564.html
*Comment:*
Integration of the senses must have occured early in the evolution of the
senses.

Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek
 

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