Intracranial recordings of occipital cortex responses to illusory visual events

Publication date

2016-06-08

Authors

de Jong, MaartjeISNI 0000000419430158
Hendriks, Ralph J M
Vansteensel, Mariska J
Raemaekers, MathijsISNI 0000000391422972
Verstraten, FransISNI 0000000033767671
Ramsey, Nick F.
Erkelens, C.J.ORCID 0000-0002-7234-1029ISNI 0000000026968854
Leijten, Frans S S
van Ee, RaymondISNI 0000000396548275

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Abstract

Ambiguous visual stimuli elicit different perceptual interpretations over time, creating the illusion that a constant stimulus is changing. We investigate whether such spontaneous changes in visual perception involve occipital brain regions specialized for processing visual information, despite the absence of concomitant changes in stimulation. Spontaneous perceptual changes observed while viewing a binocular rivalry stimulus or an ambiguous structure-from-motion stimulus were compared with stimulus-induced perceptual changes that occurred in response to an actual stimulus change. Intracranial recordings from human occipital cortex revealed that spontaneous and stimulus-induced perceptual changes were both associated with an early transient increase in high-frequency power that was more spatially confined than a later transient decrease in low-frequency power. We suggest that the observed high-frequency and lowfrequency modulations relate to initiation and maintenance of a percept, respectively. Our results are compatible with the idea that spontaneous changes in perception originate from competitive interactions within visual neural networks.

Keywords

Ambiguous, Binocular rivalry, Illusion, Intracranial, Occipital, Visual, General Neuroscience

Citation

De Jong, M C, Hendriks, R J M, Vansteensel, M J, Raemaekers, M, Verstraten, F A J, Ramsey, N F, Erkelens, C J, Leijten, F S S & Van Ee, R 2016, 'Intracranial recordings of occipital cortex responses to illusory visual events', Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 36, no. 23, pp. 6297-6311. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0242-15.2016