Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6026753 | NeuroImage | 2014 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
During binocular rivalry, visual perception alternates spontaneously between two different monocular images. Such perceptual reversals are slowed or halted if stimuli are presented intermittently with inter-stimulus intervals larger than ~Â 400Â ms - a phenomenon called stabilization. Often, the neural correlates of reversal and stabilization are studied separately, and both phenomena in turn are studied separately from the neural correlates of conscious perception. To distinguish the neural correlates of perceptual content, stabilization and reversal, we recorded MEG signals associated with each in the same group of healthy humans observing repeated trials of intermittent presentation of a dichoptic stimulus. Perceptual content correlated mainly with modulation of stimulus-specific activity in occipital/temporal areas 150-270Â ms after stimulus onset, possibly reflecting inhibition of the neural populations representing the suppressed image. Stability of perception reflected a gradual build-up of this modulation across at least 10 trials and was also, to some extent, associated with parietal activity 40-90Â ms and 220-270Â ms after stimulus onset. Perceptual reversals, in contrast, were associated with parietal (150-270Â ms) and temporal (150-210Â ms) activity on the trial before the reversal and a gradual change in perception-specific activity in occipital (150-270Â ms) and temporal (220-420Â ms) areas across at least 10 trials leading up to a reversal. Mechanistically, these findings suggest that stability of perception during rivalry is maintained by modulation of activity related to the two monocular images, and gradual adaptation of neuronal populations leads to instability that is eventually resolved by signals from parietal and late sensory cortices.
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Authors
Kristian Sandberg, Gareth Robert Barnes, Bahador Bahrami, Ryota Kanai, Morten Overgaard, Geraint Rees,