“…As noted before, effects of sensory cues may be multiplied, disambiguated, vetoed, inhibited, or the stimulation may even lead to an emergent or novel effect (de Gelder & Bertelson, 2003;Gottfried & Dolan, 2004;Helbig & Ernst, 2008;Pourtois et al, 2005). Research shows that congruent and incongruent crossmodal conditions elicit different cortical activations (Belardinelli et al, 2004;Chen, Yeh, & Spence, 2011;Doehrmann & Naumer, 2008;Driver & Noesselt, 2008;Gottfried & Dolan, 2004;O'Callaghan, 2012;Senkowski, Schneider, Foxe, & Engel, 2008;Thurlings, van Erp, Brouwer, Blankertz, & Werkhoven, 2012). Congruent stimuli (temporal, spatial, or semantic/ associative) enhance activation in brain regions mediating stable object representations, whereas incongruent stimuli increase activation in regions involved in cognitive control (Watson et al, 2013).…”