“…3, labeled
yellow region) shows interaction or integration effects when corresponding
sounds are also present (Calvert et al,
2000; Beauchamp et al, 2004b,
2004a; Taylor et al, 2006, 2009; Campanella and Belin,
2007; Campbell, 2008), and are
generally activated by human action sounds in the absence of visual input (Lewis et al, 2004, 2006; Bidet-Caulet et
al., 2005; Gazzola et al,
2006; Galati et al, 2008;
Engel et al, 2009). These regions
were further shown to be more strongly activated by human action sounds relative
to non-human animal action sounds, and lesser still by non-living action sounds
(Engel et al, 2009) or vocalizations
(Webster et al, 2017). Thus, from a
bottom-up signal processing perspective, these complexes appear to play a
prominent perceptual role in transforming the spatially and temporally dynamic
features of natural auditory (and visual) action information into a common
neural code, conveying symbolic associations of physically matched audio-visual
features.…”