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Original Articles

A glance back on 50 years of research in perception

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Pages 65-71 | Received 09 Mar 2012, Accepted 15 Jun 2012, Published online: 27 Jul 2012
 

Abstract

Our understanding of human perception has developed significantly over the last 50 years, informed by research in neurophysiology, behavioural studies, psychophysics and neuroimaging. When the Department of Psychology at Trinity College Dublin was founded 50 years ago, teaching and research in perception was based on each sense in isolation, with a strong focus on vision. Recent research has revealed that perception in one sensory modality can be significantly modified by inputs from the other senses. Moreover, such cross-sensory interactions seem to occur much earlier in information processing than was historically assumed. Here we highlight some of the main studies that best demonstrate how research in multisensory perception has enhanced our understanding of how the human brain processes information from the external world. In particular, we focus on higher-level perceptual tasks such as object, face, and body perception, and the perception of socially meaningful information, such as emotion and attractiveness. We also explore how changes in multisensory processing occur throughout the lifespan. We argue that a multisensory approach provides us with a better insight into the functional properties of the perceptual brain.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Fiona N. Newell

All authors contributed equally to this work and, apart from the senior author F.N.N., are listed in alphabetical order.

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