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Sensory and multisensory reasoning: Is Bayesian updating modality-dependent?

Stefano Fait, Stefania Pighin, Andrea Passerini, Francesco Pavani, Katya Tentori

Cognition(2023)

Cited 0|Views23
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Abstract
Bayesianism assumes that probabilistic updating does not depend on the sensory modality by which information is processed. In this study, we investigate whether probability judgments based on visual and auditory information conform to this assumption. In a series of five experiments, we found that this is indeed the case when information is acquired through a single modality (i.e., only auditory or only visual) but not necessarily so when it comes from multiple modalities (i.e., audio-visual). In the latter case, judgments prove more accurate when both visual and auditory information individually support (i.e., increase the probability of) the hypothesis they also jointly support (synergy condition) than when either visual or auditory information support one hypothesis that is not the one they jointly support (contrast condition). In the extreme case in which both visual and auditory information individually support an alternative hypothesis to the one they jointly support (i.e., double-contrast condition), participants' accuracy is not only lower than in the synergy condition but near chance. This synergycontrast effect represents a violation of the assumption that information modality is irrelevant for Bayesian updating and indicates an important limitation of multisensory integration, one which has not been previously documented.
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Key words
Bayesian reasoning,Belief updating,Conservatism,Multisensory integration
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