Fig. 1: Averaged results of HC (first row), BD patients (second row) and SZ patients (third row) for each condition (AT, AV and VT) of the TOJ task. | Schizophrenia

Fig. 1: Averaged results of HC (first row), BD patients (second row) and SZ patients (third row) for each condition (AT, AV and VT) of the TOJ task.

From: Multisensory temporal processing in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: implications for psychosis

Fig. 1

Left: Proportion of trials (averaged across participants) judged as “Auditory stimulus delivered before the tactile stimulus” plotted against the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between auditory and tactile stimuli (0 ms corresponds to synchrony; negative and positive values correspond to auditory stimulus presented before and after the tactile stimulus respectively). Center: Proportion of trials (averaged across participants) judged as “Visual stimulus delivered before the auditory stimulus” plotted against the SOA between visual and auditory stimuli (0 ms corresponds to synchrony; negative and positive values correspond to visual stimulus presented before and after the auditory stimulus respectively). Right: Proportion of trials (averaged across participants) judged as “Visual stimulus delivered before the tactile stimulus” plotted against the SOA between tactile and visual stimuli (0 ms corresponds to synchrony; negative and positive values correspond to visual stimulus presented before and after the tactile stimulus respectively). Data are fitted with the Gaussian error function.

Back to article page