Using binocular rivalry to tag foreground sounds: Towards an objective visual measure for auditory multistability
Author(s) -
Wolfgang Einhäuser,
Sabine Thomassen,
Alexandra Bendixen
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.126
H-Index - 113
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/17.1.34
Subject(s) - binocular rivalry , percept , multistability , tone (literature) , grating , perception , psychology , computer science , communication , speech recognition , acoustics , visual perception , physics , optics , neuroscience , art , literature , nonlinear system , quantum mechanics
These files supplement the publication Einhäuser, W., Thomassen, S., & Bendixen, A. (2017). Using binocular rivalry to tag foreground sounds: towards an objective visual measure for auditory multistability. Journal of Vision, 17:34, 1-19. The data are free for scientific use, provided this reference is appropriately cited.exp1_data.mat contains all the data of experiment 1 as cell arrays of size 8x16x8 (subject x block x trial) or 8x16 (subject x block). Specifically:xEye: the horizontal eye position in raw (pixel coordinates)gain: the OKN slow phase gain computed from the xEye data as described in the paper; in audio-visual blocks the sign is chosen such that positive gain corresponds to the direction of the grating associated with the low tone; in unambiguous visual blocks (1,16) positive sign corresponds to the direction of the grating.ixLow, ixHigh, ixNone, ixBoth: indices for xEye and gain of the same subject and block for which the button corresponding to the low tone, the high tone, both buttons or no button was pressed.exp2_data.mat and exp3_data.mat contain the data of experiment 2 and experiment 3, respectively, and are organized analogously to exp1_data.mat.figure3.m through figure6.m use these data to plot the respective paper figures to exemplify usage of the data
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