Illusory Texture Demos

Authors: Richard McWalter and Josh McDermott
Updated: Sun 24 November 2019
Source: http://mcdermottlab.mit.edu/textcont.html
Type: audio files
Languages: N/A
Keywords: sound-textureperceptionspeechmusic
Open Access: yes
License: CC BY 4.0
Publications: McWalter, R. & McDermott, J. (2019). Illusory sound texture reveals multi-second statistical completion in auditory scene analysis. Nature Communications. 10: 5098. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-12893-0
Citation: McWalter, R. & McDermott, J. (2019). Illusory sound texture reveals multi-second statistical completion in auditory scene analysis. McDermott Lab. http://mcdermottlab.mit.edu/textcont.html
Summary:

Sound sources in the world are experienced as stable even when intermittently obscured, implying perceptual completion mechanisms that “fill in” missing sensory information. We demonstrate a filling-in phenomenon in which the brain extrapolates the statistics of background sounds (textures) over periods of several seconds when they are interrupted by another sound, producing vivid percepts of illusory texture. The effect differs from previously described completion effects in that 1) the extrapolated sound must be defined statistically given the stochastic nature of texture, and 2) the effect lasts much longer, enabling introspection and facilitating assessment of the underlying representation. Illusory texture biases subsequent texture statistic estimates indistinguishably from actual texture, suggesting that it is represented similarly to actual texture. The illusion appears to represent an inference about whether the background is likely to continue during concurrent sounds, providing a stable statistical representation of the ongoing environment despite unstable sensory evidence.