Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering (Discontinued)

Author(s): Taichi Hirayama, Hiroaki Shoji and Hisaki Ozaki

DOI: 10.2174/2213385203666150828225654

Gender Differences in Cerebral Processing of Audio-Visual Information

Page: [76 - 84] Pages: 9

  • * (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

Background: In daily life, visual information plays an important role to improve accuracy of auditory perception, and such phenomenon might be explained by audio-visual integration. However, audio-visual integration differs between genders, i.e., female tends to perceive voice with mouth movement more accurately. In this study, we examined gender differences of cerebral processing of audio-visual information. Methods: Cerebral processing was examined in male and female participants under different audio-visual conditions: 1) Auditory (A) condition: presentation of white-noise (noise) or a vowel (/a/ or /i/) pronounced by a male; 2) Visual (V) condition: presentation of a face image pronouncing a vowel ([a] or [i]), 3) Audio-Visual (AV) condition: simultaneous presentation of auditory (noise or vowel) and visual stimuli. Participants were asked to press a button when the vowel /a/ or noise was presented in the A or AV condition. Subtracted auditory ERPs in the AV condition (congruent: /a/ with [a]-[a] and incongruent: /a/ with [i]-[i]) were compared to ERPs in the A condition (auditory /a/). Results: In the AV condition, amplitude of auditory P2 in the male participants was smaller than that in the females, whether the stimulus set was congruent or incongruent. The lower P2 amplitude in males may have been caused by overlapping of negative components, which may be related to selective attention. Subtracted visual ERPs in the AV condition (congruent: [a] with /a/-/a/ and incongruent: [a] with /i/-/i/) were compared to ERPs in the V condition (visual [a]). Amplitude of visual N170 to congruent stimuli was smaller than that for alone visual stimuli only for the females. Conclusion: Lower amplitude of the N170 may reflect enhanced facial processing in females. Gender differences in audio-visual information processing were discussed.

Keywords: Audio-visual integration, event-related potential, gender difference, N170.

Graphical Abstract