“…Most of our experiences are multisensory in nature, and there is a growing body of research examining how sensory modalities interact while processing multisensory information (see Stein and Meredith, 1993; Bahrick et al, 2004; Calvert et al, 2004; Spence and Driver, 2004; Spence and McDonald, 2004; Talsma et al, 2010; Spence et al, 2012; van Atteveldt et al, 2014; Murray et al, 2016; Spence, 2018, for reviews). Simultaneously presenting information to multiple sensory modalities can sometimes facilitate learning and speed up responding (Miller, 1982; Giard and Peronnet, 1999; Bahrick and Lickliter, 2000; Bahrick et al, 2002; Fort et al, 2002; Colonius and Diederich, 2006; Sinnett et al, 2008), however, there are also many situations where stimuli in one modality interfere or alter perception in another modality (Colavita, 1974; McGurk and MacDonald, 1976; Shams et al, 2000, 2002; Sloutsky and Napolitano, 2003).…”