“…There is some evidence that the neural response of infants is greater to bimodal compared to unimodal stimulation, paralleling that observed in adults and non-human animals (e.g., Besle et al, 2004;Giard & Peronnet, 1999;Pilling, 2009;Reynolds et al, 2014;Brefczynski-Lewis et al, 2009;Wallace & Stein, 1997;Wallace, Wilkinson, & Stein 1996). Infants also appear to integrate information from different senses early during sensory processing in some contexts, as has also been documented routinely in adults (Hyde et al, 2011;Besle et al, 2009). Further, later attentional responses in adults and infants distinguish between bimodal audio-visual stimulation containing redundant (e.g., synchronous) and non-redundant (e.g., asynchronous) visual face and auditory voice information (Hyde et al, 2011, Grossmann et Intersensory Perception 26 al., 2006Reynolds et al, 2014;Vogel et al, 2012;Besle et al, 2009).…”