Crossmodal Space and Crossmodal Attention

Front Cover
Charles Spence, Jon Driver
OUP Oxford, Apr 8, 2004 - Philosophy - 323 pages
Many organisms possess multiple sensory systems, such as vision, hearing, touch, smell, and taste. The possession of such multiple ways of sensing the world offers many benefits. These benefits arise not only because each modality can sense different aspects of the environment, but also because different senses can respond jointly to the same external object or event, thus enriching the overall experience - for example, looking at an individual while listening to them speak. However, combining information from different senses also poses many challenges for the nervous system. In recent years there has been dramatic progress in understanding how information from different sensory modalities gets integrated in order to construct useful representations of external space; and in how such multimodal representations constrain spatial attention. Such progress has involved numerous different disciplines, including neurophysiology, experimental psychology, neurological work with brain-damaged patients, neuroimaging studies, and computational modelling. This volume brings together the leading researchers from all these approaches, to present the first integrative overview of this central topic in cognitive neuroscience.
 

Contents

Crossmodal spatial interactions in subcortical and cortical circuits
25
A system of multimodal areas in the primate brain
51
Neuropsychological evidence for multimodal representations of space near
69
Multimodal spatial representations in the primate parietal lobe
99
A computational neural theory of multisensory spatial representations
123
The psychology of multimodal perception
141
evidence from human performance
179
Emiliano Macaluso Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience University College London
212
Electrophysiology of human crossmodal spatial attention
221
Functional imaging of crossmodal spatial representations and crossmodal
247
Exogenous spatialcuing studies of human crossmodal attention
277
John McDonald Department of Psychology Simon Fraser University Burnaby
312
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