Oleszkiewicz, Anna Idziak, Paulina Rokosz, Marta
Published in
Archives of sexual behavior
Social perception is a multimodal process involving vision and audition as central input sources for human social cognitive processes. However, it remains unclear how profoundly deaf people assess others in the context of mating and social interaction. The current study explored the relative importance of different sensory modalities (vision, smell...
Bayoudh, Khaled Knani, Raja Hamdaoui, Fayçal Mtibaa, Abdellatif
Published in
The Visual Computer
The research progress in multimodal learning has grown rapidly over the last decade in several areas, especially in computer vision. The growing potential of multimodal data streams and deep learning algorithms has contributed to the increasing universality of deep multimodal learning. This involves the development of models capable of processing a...
Senoussi, Mehdi Dugué, Laura
Our senses – vision, audition, touch, taste and smell – constantly receive a large amount of information. This information is processed and used in order to guide our actions. Cognitive sciences consist in studying mental abilities through different disciplines, e.g. linguistic, neuropsychology, neuroscience or modelling. Each discipline considers ...
Azari, Leila Mioni, Giovanna Rousseau, Robert Grondin, Simon
Published in
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
In this 3-experiment study, the Weber fractions in the 300-ms and 900-ms duration ranges are obtained with 9 types of empty intervals resulting from the combinations of three types of signals for marking the beginning and end of the signals: auditory (A), visual (V), or tactile (T). There were three types of intramodal intervals (AA, TT, and VV) an...
Estay, Karinna Pan, Shuliang Zhong, Fang Capitaine, Chloé Guinard, Jean-Xavier
Published in
Appetite
The successful promotion of vegetable consumption by children requires a deep understanding of children's vegetable preferences as well as the factors shaping them throughout childhood. This study analyzed children vegetable liking in four different age ranges (5-6, 7-8, 9-10 and 11-12 years old) in Chile, China and the United States. Three hundred...
Williams, Emily A. Yüksel, Ezgi M. Stewart, Andrew J. Jones, Luke A.
Published in
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Performance in temporal difference threshold and estimation tasks is markedly less accurate for visual than for auditory intervals. In addition, thresholds and estimates are likewise less accurate for empty than for filled intervals. In scalar timing theory, these differences have been explained as alterations in pacemaker rate, which is faster for...
Sorokowska, Agnieszka Oleszkiewicz, Anna Sorokowski, Piotr
Published in
Archives of Sexual Behavior
Human attractiveness is a potent social variable, and people assess their potential partners based on input from a range of sensory modalities. Among all sensory cues, visual signals are typically considered to be the most important and most salient source of information. However, it remains unclear how people without sight assess others. In the cu...
Avilés, Jesús M. Amo, Luisa
Published in
Evolutionary Biology
Modern birds possess an olfactory apparatus similar to that of other vertebrates, yet the major evolutionary forces that drove the evolution of diversity in olfactory capabilities in birds remain elusive. Several non-mutually exclusive evolutionary scenarios for the evolution of olfactory capability in birds have been proposed. Olfactory capability...
Bratzke, Daniel Quinn, Katrina R Ulrich, Rolf Bausenhart, Karin M
Published in
Acta psychologica
Rattat and Picard (2012) reported that the coding of temporal information in short-term memory is modality-specific, that is, temporal information received via the visual (auditory) modality is stored as a visual (auditory) code. This conclusion was supported by modality-specific interference effects on visual and auditory duration discrimination, ...
McGregor, Rafe
Published in
Ethical Theory and Moral Practice
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that Francis Hutcheson’s moral sense theory offers a satisfactory account of moral perception. I introduce Hutcheson’s work in §1 and indicate why the existence of a sixth sense is not implausible. I provide a summary of Robert Cowan and Robert Audi’s respective theories of evaluative perception in §2, id...