Abstract
Making decisions based on noisy sensory information is a crucial function of the brain. Various decisions take each sensory signal's uncertainty into account. Here, we investigated whether perceptual inferences rely on accurate estimates of sensory uncertainty. Participants completed a set of auditory, visual, and audiovisual spatial as well as temporal tasks. We fitted Bayesian observer models of each task to every participant's full dataset. Crucially, in some model variants, the uncertainty estimates employed for perceptual inferences were independent of the actual uncertainty associated with the sensory signals. Model comparisons and analysis of the best-fitting parameters revealed that, in unimodal and bimodal contexts, participants' perceptual decisions relied on underestimates of auditory spatial and audiovisual temporal uncertainty. These findings challenge the ubiquitous assumption that human behaviour optimally accounts for sensory uncertainty regardless of sensory domain.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 20242880 |
Journal | Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |
Volume | 292 |
Issue number | 2048 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jun 4 2025 |
Keywords
- audiovisual spatiotemporal integration
- Bayesian causal inference
- multisensory integration
- sensory uncertainty
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Immunology and Microbiology
- General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
- General Environmental Science
- General Agricultural and Biological Sciences