The experiment consisted of four experimental blocks. Within each of these blocks, each of the 144 stimuli (four D-R+, four D+R-, four D-R-, and four D+R+ videos, each with nine different levels of audiovisual asynchrony) were presented once, resulting in 576 trials in total. A pseudo-randomization guaranteed that no more than three videos of the same type of asynchrony (audio-first vs. visual-first) were presented in a row to prevent adaptation to one or the other. Additionally, it was controlled that no more than two videos of the exact same level of asynchrony were presented directly after each other. We employed the same task as in Study 1.
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