Top-Down Influences To Multistable Perception: Evidence From Temporal Dynamics

We have studied the temporal characteristics of bistable perception of the stimuli of two types: one involves alterations in a perceived depth and another one has an ambiguous content. We used the Necker lattice and lines of shadowed circles ambiguously perceived either as spheres or holes as stimul...

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Main Authors: Podvigina, Daria N., Chernigovskaya, Tatiana V.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1110348
https://zenodo.org/record/1110348
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Summary:We have studied the temporal characteristics of bistable perception of the stimuli of two types: one involves alterations in a perceived depth and another one has an ambiguous content. We used the Necker lattice and lines of shadowed circles ambiguously perceived either as spheres or holes as stimuli of the first type. The Winson figure (the Eskimo/Indian picture) was a stimulus of the second type. We have analyzed how often the reversals occurred (reversal rate) and for how long each of the two interpretations, or percepts, was observed during one presentation (stability durations). For all three ambiguous images the reversal rate and the stability durations had similar values, which provide another evidence for a significant role of top-down processes in multistable perception. : {"references": ["J. Kornmeier, and M. Bach, \"Ambiguous figures \u2013 what happens in the\nbrain when perception changes but not the stimulus,\" Front. Hum.\nNeurosci., 2012, vol. 6, pp, 1-23.", "T.C. Toppino, and G.M. Long, \"Selective adaptation with reversible\nfigures: don't change that channel\", Percept Psychophys., 1987, vol. 42,\npp. 37\u201348.", "G.M. Long, and A.D. Olszweski, \"To reverse or not to reverse: when is\nan ambiguous figure not ambiguous?\", Am J Psychol., 1999, vol. 112,\npp. 41\u201371.", "J. Kornmeier, and M. Bach, \"Early neural activity in Necker-cube\nreversal: evidence for low-level processing of a gestalt phenomenon\",\nPsychophysiology, 2004, vol. 41, iss. 1, pp. 1-8.", "I. Rock, S. Hall, and J. Davis, \"Why do ambiguous figures reverse,\"\nActa Psychologica, 1994, vol. 87, iss. 1, pp. 33\u201359.", "D.A. Leiopold, and N.K. Logothetis, \"Multistable phenomena: changing\nviews in perception,\" Trends Cogn. Sci., 1999, vol. 3, iss. 7, 1 July, pp.\n254\u2013264.", "J. Kornmeier, Ch.M. Hein, and M.Bach, \"Multistable perception: When\nbottom-up and top-down coincide,\" Brain and Cognition, 2009, vol. 69,\npp. 138-147.", "R. van Ee, L.C.J. van Dam, G.J. Brouwer, \"Voluntary control and the\ndynamics of perceptual bi-stability\", Vis Res, 2005, vol 45, pp. 41-55.", "J. Kornmeier, S.P. Heinrich, H. Atmanspacher, and M. Bach, \"The\nreversing \"Necker Wall\" - a new paradigm with reversal entrainment\nreveals an early EEG correlate,\" Investigative Ophthalmology and\nVisual Science, 2001, vol. 42, p. 409.\n[10] J.E. Bergum, B.O. Bergum, \"Self-perceived creativity and ambiguous\nfigure reversal-rates\", Bull Psychonom Soc, 1979, vol. 14, no 5, pp. 373-\n374.\n[11] B.O. Bergum, J.E. Bergum, \"Creativity, perceptual stability, and selfperception\",\nBull Psychonom Soc, 1979, vol. 14, no 1, pp. 61\u201365.\n[12] H. Klintman, \"Original thinking and ambiguous figure reversal rates\",\nBull Psychonom Soc, 1984, vol. 22, no 2, pp. 129\u2013131.\n[13] J. Wernery, \"Bistable perception of the Necker cube in the context of\ncognition and personality\", ETH, 2013.\n[14] N.F. Troje, and M. McAdam, \"The viewing-from-above bias and the\nsilhoutte illusion\", i-Perception, 2010, vol. 1, iss. 3, pp. 143\u2013148.\n[15] V.S. Ramachandran, \"Perceiving Shape from Shading\", Sci. Amer.,\n1988, vol. 259. no 2, pp. 76-83.\n[16] V.A. Maksimova, D.N. Podvigina, \"Ambiguous figures perception\nunder binocular and monocular viewing conditions\", Perception, 2014,\nvol 43, ECVP Abstract Supplement, p. 111."]}