Effects of intermodal attention and of cross-modal
links in spatial attention on visual and auditory
event-related potentials (ERPs) were investigated in two
experiments where participants had to attend to one stimulus
modality (audition or vision) to respond to infrequently
presented targets whenever these were presented at a relevant
location (indicated by a cue). The ERP effects of intermodal
attention (measured by comparing the ERPs elicited by visual
and auditory stimuli when the respective modality was relevant
or irrelevant) were differently distributed in vision and
audition, suggesting that intermodal attention operates
by a selective modulation of modality-specific areas. Similar
ERP effects of spatial attention (measured by comparing
the ERPs to stimuli at cued and uncued locations) were
elicited at midline electrodes in vision and audition.
With one notable exception, these effects were also present
when attention was directed within the other modality,
suggesting the existence of cross-modal links between vision
and audition in the control of transient spatial attention.