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Experiment 1 Experiment 1
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Method Method
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Participants Participants
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Design Design
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Apparatus and Stimuli Apparatus and Stimuli
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Task and Procedure Task and Procedure
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Results Results
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T1 Accuracy T1 Accuracy
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T2 Accuracy T2 Accuracy
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Discussion Discussion
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Experiment 2 Experiment 2
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Method Method
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Results Results
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T1 Accuracy T1 Accuracy
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T2 Accuracy T2 Accuracy
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Discussion Discussion
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Experiment 3 Experiment 3
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Methods and Participants Methods and Participants
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Results Results
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T1 Accuracy T1 Accuracy
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T2 Accuracy T2 Accuracy
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Discussion Discussion
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General Discussion General Discussion
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References References
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14 Cross-Modal Interactions between Sensory Modalities: Implications for the Design of Multisensory Displays
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Published:December 2006
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Abstract
Research on multisensory integration focused on interactions between the modalities occurring within a single task. A completely different line of research has concentrated on multisensory separation using dual-task paradigms looking specifically at how well people can perform two tasks at the same time. An obvious example of a structural distinction is between the eyes (visual processing) and the ears (auditory processing). This chapter summarizes the results of research on cross-modal interactions between sensory modalities and the implications for the design of multisensory displays. This study closely monitored the time course of visual-auditory processing interactions while keeping local sensory-masking effects constant. The research used the attentional blink paradigm to investigate the mechanisms underlying cross-modal interactions. The findings support the multiple-resource theory's assumption of independent resources for auditory and visual processing. However, the research also indicates that cross-modal interference can occur when central processing is necessary for information consolidation.
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