日本語
 
Help Privacy Policy ポリシー/免責事項
  詳細検索ブラウズ

アイテム詳細

登録内容を編集ファイル形式で保存
 
 
ダウンロード電子メール
  Causal inference in multisensory perception and the brain

Rohe, T. (2014). Causal inference in multisensory perception and the brain. PhD Thesis, Eberhard-Karls-Universität, Tübingen, Germany.

Item is

基本情報

表示: 非表示:
資料種別: 学位論文

ファイル

表示: ファイル
非表示: ファイル
:
Diss-Rohe-2014.pdf (出版社版), 5MB
ファイルのパーマリンク:
https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0000-DCF7-2
ファイル名:
Diss-Rohe-2014.pdf
説明:
-
OA-Status:
閲覧制限:
公開
MIMEタイプ / チェックサム:
application/pdf / [MD5]
技術的なメタデータ:
著作権日付:
-
著作権情報:
-
CCライセンス:
-

関連URL

表示:

作成者

表示:
非表示:
 作成者:
Rohe, T1, 2, 著者           
所属:
1Department Human Perception, Cognition and Action, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Max Planck Society, ou_1497797              
2Research Group Cognitive Neuroimaging, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Max Planck Society, ou_1497804              

内容説明

表示:
非表示:
キーワード: -
 要旨: To build coherent and veridical multisensory representations of the environment, human observers consider the causal structure of multisensory signals: If they infer a common source of the signals, observers integrate them weighted by their reliability. Otherwise, they segregate the signals. Generally, observers infer a common source if the signals correspond structurally and spatiotemporally. In six projects, the current PhD thesis investigated this causal inference model with the help of audiovisual spatial signals presented to human observers in a ventriloquist paradigm. A first psychophysical study showed that sensory reliability determines causal inference via two mechanisms: Sensory reliability modulates how observers infer the causal structure from spatial signal disparity. Further, sensory reliability determines the weight of audiovisual signals if observers integrate the signals under assumption of a common source. Using multivariate decoding of fMRI signals, three PhD projects revealed that auditory and visual cortical hierarchies jointly implement causal inference. Specific regions of the hierarchies represented constituent spatial estimates of the causal inference model. In line with this model, anterior regions of intraparietal sulcus (IPS) represent audiovisual signals dependent on visual reliability, task-relevance, and spatial disparity of the signals. However, even in case of small signal discrepancies suggesting a common source, reliability-weighting in IPS was suboptimal as compared to a Maximum Estimation Likelihood model. By temporally manipulating visual reliability, the fifth PhD project demonstrated that human observers learn sensory reliability from current and past signals in order to weight audiovisual signals, consistent with a Bayesian learner. Finally, the sixth project showed that if visual flashes were rendered unaware by continuous flash suppression, the visual bias of the perceived auditory location was strongly reduced but still significant. The reduced ventriloquist effect was presumably mediated by the drop of visual reliability accompanying perceptual unawareness. In conclusion, the PhD thesis suggests that human observers integrate multisensory signals according to their causal structure and temporal regularity: They integrate the signals if a common source is likely by weighting them proportional to the reliability which they learnt from the signals’ history. Crucially, specific regions of cortical hierarchies jointly implement these multisensory processes.

資料詳細

表示:
非表示:
言語:
 日付: 2014-042014-10-10
 出版の状態: 出版
 ページ: -
 出版情報: Tübingen, Germany : Eberhard-Karls-Universität
 目次: -
 査読: -
 識別子(DOI, ISBNなど): BibTex参照ID: Rohe2014
 学位: 博士号 (PhD)

関連イベント

表示:

訴訟

表示:

Project information

表示:

出版物

表示: