Gaze-Direction-Based MEG Averaging During Audiovisual Speech Perception

Front Hum Neurosci. 2010 Mar 8:4:17. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2010.00017. eCollection 2010.

Abstract

To take a step towards real-life-like experimental setups, we simultaneously recorded magnetoencephalographic (MEG) signals and subject's gaze direction during audiovisual speech perception. The stimuli were utterances of /apa/ dubbed onto two side-by-side female faces articulating /apa/ (congruent) and /aka/ (incongruent) in synchrony, repeated once every 3 s. Subjects (N = 10) were free to decide which face they viewed, and responses were averaged to two categories according to the gaze direction. The right-hemisphere 100-ms response to the onset of the second vowel (N100m') was a fifth smaller to incongruent than congruent stimuli. The results demonstrate the feasibility of realistic viewing conditions with gaze-based averaging of MEG signals.

Keywords: McGurk illusion; auditory cortex; eye tracking; human; magnetoencephalography.