One of the fundamental characteristics of the brain is its ability to pool information from different sensory modalities in order to facilitate the detection and identification of external events. This process of """"""""multisensory integration"""""""" is continuously in operation and has profound influences on sensation, perception, and overt behavior. Its impact is evident in the facilitated detection, identification, and reaction to combinations of concordant cues from different modalities, and in the striking perceptual anomalies that occur when these cross-modal cues are discordant. Although the perceptual consequences of multisensory integration have been discussed by philosophers of science the time of ancient Greece, and have been explored in controlled studies during the modern era, our understanding of the basic neural principles by which it operates during normal behavior is surprisingly rudimentary. A series of experiments is proposed here using the multisensory neuron in the superior colliculus (SC) to explore the neural processes that underlie this phenomenon. The initial aim is to determine the principles by which individual SC neurons integrate information from different sensory modalities (i.e., auditory and visual) by evaluating the multisensory products of systematic changes in the physical properties of those stimuli. These data will then be used to help understand how different levels of the neuraxis cooperate in producing this SC capacity, how this process is expressed during normal behavior, and whether the products of multisensory integration are immutable consequences of the physical properties of the stimuli encountered, or whether they can be substantially altered by the significance of those stimuli and/or the context in which they are encountered.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01NS022543-18
Application #
6327236
Study Section
Integrative, Functional and Cognitive Neuroscience 8 (IFCN)
Program Officer
Michel, Mary E
Project Start
1982-08-01
Project End
2006-04-30
Budget Start
2001-05-01
Budget End
2002-04-30
Support Year
18
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$361,458
Indirect Cost
Name
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Department
Anatomy/Cell Biology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
937727907
City
Winston-Salem
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27157
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Alvarado, Juan Carlos; Stanford, Terrence R; Vaughan, J William et al. (2007) Cortex mediates multisensory but not unisensory integration in superior colliculus. J Neurosci 27:12775-86
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Stanford, Terrence R; Stein, Barry E (2007) Superadditivity in multisensory integration: putting the computation in context. Neuroreport 18:787-92
Alvarado, Juan Carlos; Vaughan, J William; Stanford, Terrence R et al. (2007) Multisensory versus unisensory integration: contrasting modes in the superior colliculus. J Neurophysiol 97:3193-205
Jiang, Wan; Jiang, Huai; Rowland, Benjamin A et al. (2007) Multisensory orientation behavior is disrupted by neonatal cortical ablation. J Neurophysiol 97:557-62
Jiang, Wan; Jiang, Huai; Stein, Barry E (2006) Neonatal cortical ablation disrupts multisensory development in superior colliculus. J Neurophysiol 95:1380-96
Stanford, Terrence R; Quessy, Stephan; Stein, Barry E (2005) Evaluating the operations underlying multisensory integration in the cat superior colliculus. J Neurosci 25:6499-508
McHaffie, John G; Stanford, Terrence R; Stein, Barry E et al. (2005) Subcortical loops through the basal ganglia. Trends Neurosci 28:401-7
Perrault Jr, Thomas J; Vaughan, J William; Stein, Barry E et al. (2005) Superior colliculus neurons use distinct operational modes in the integration of multisensory stimuli. J Neurophysiol 93:2575-86

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