The auditory stimulus reduced the visual inhibition of return: Evidence from psychophysiological interaction analysis

Author:

He Yufeng1ORCID,Peng Xing2,Sun Jiaying1,Tang Xiaoyu1ORCID,Wang Aijun3,Zhang Ming45

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Liaoning Collaborative Innovation Center of Children and Adolescents Healthy Personality Assessment and Cultivation Liaoning Normal University Dalian China

2. College of Flight Technology, Institute of Aviation Human Factors and Cognitive Neuroscience Civil Aviation Flight University of China Guanghan China

3. Department of Psychology Soochow University Suzhou China

4. Department of Psychology Suzhou University of Science and Technology Suzhou China

5. Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems Okayama University Okayama Japan

Abstract

AbstractVisual inhibition of return (IOR) is a mechanism for preventing attention from returning to previously examined spatial locations. Previous studies have found that auditory stimuli presented simultaneously with a visual target can reduce or even eliminate the visual IOR. However, the mechanism responsible for decreased visual IOR accompanied by auditory stimuli is unclear. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we aimed to investigate how auditory stimuli reduce visual IOR. Behaviorally, we found that the visual IOR accompanying auditory stimuli was significant but smaller than the visual IOR. Neurally, only in the validly cued trials, the superior temporal gyrus showed increased neural coupling with the intraparietal sulcus, presupplementary motor area, and some other areas in audiovisual conditions compared with visual conditions. These results suggest that the reduction in visual IOR by the simultaneous auditory stimuli may be due to a dual mechanism: rescuing the suppressed visual salience and facilitating response initiation. Our results support crossmodal interactions can occur across multiple neural levels and cognitive processing stages. This study provides a new perspective for understanding attention‐orienting networks and response initiation based on crossmodal information.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology,Anatomy

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