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Multisensory integration of stimulus-driven and goal-driven signals during urgent saccadic choices

Preprint Created on 24 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

The ability to orient or attend to sensory events is generally greater in response to visual and auditory cues occurring together than in response to single-modality cues occurring alone. In such cases the perceptual fusion of cross-modal stimuli (multisensory integration) depends on low-level features (e.g., location, intensity) and follows well established principles. However, less is known about multisensory integration mechanisms when behavioral responses are less direct and require top-down control. Here we investigate this in human participants using an urgent multisensory choice task that effectively dissociates stimulus-driven and goal-driven contributions to performance based on their distinct temporal signatures. Task conditions varied the modality of the cues (auditory, visual, or both), their location (left or right), and the rule defining the correct choice (look toward or away from a given cue). When spatially coincident cues were associated with the same response rule (``look away''), we observed multisensory enhancement and performance remained close to a statistical expectation as the choice process unfolded. However, when spatially disparate cues were associated with different rules but the same target, one cue dominated performance and the other produced crossmodal capture, i.e., low-level competition. The results indicate that the efficacy of multisensory integration is dictated by the stimulus- and goal-driven signals produced by each cue, with all four factors rapidly interacting in accordance to the dynamics of spatial attention.

Paro, A. N., Sheikh, B. I., Stanford, T. R., Salinas, E.

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