Elsevier

Vision Research

Volume 49, Issue 9, 11 May 2009, Pages 931-942
Vision Research

Tactile stimulation accelerates behavioral responses to visual stimuli through enhancement of occipital gamma-band activity

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Abstract

We investigated how responses of occipital cortex to visual stimuli are modulated by simultaneously presented tactile stimuli. Magnetoencephalography was recorded while subjects performed a simple reaction time task. Presence of a task-irrelevant tactile stimulus leads to faster behavioral responses and earlier and stronger gamma-band synchronization in occipital cortex, irrespective of the relative location of the tactile stimulus. While also other stimulus related responses in occipital cortex were modulated (alpha-band and evoked responses in parieto-occipital region), correlation-analysis revealed induced gamma-band activity to be the best predictor of the faster behavioral response latencies, suggesting a key-role of oscillatory activity for cross-modal integration.

Keywords

Rhythm
Rhythmic activity
Rhythmic synchronization
Gamma-band activity
Gamma-band synchronization
MED
Cross-modal
Multisensory

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