Early neural activity in Necker-cube reversal: evidence for low-level processing of a gestalt phenomenon.
Eintragsart
Autoren/Mitwirkende
- Kornmeier, Jürgen (Autor)
- Bach, Michael (Autor)
Titel
Early neural activity in Necker-cube reversal: evidence for low-level processing of a gestalt phenomenon.
Zusammenfassung
Normally we experience the visual world as stable. Ambiguous figures provide a fascinating exception: On prolonged inspection, the "Necker cube" undergoes a sudden, unavoidable reversal of its perceived front-back orientation. What happens in the brain when spontaneously switching between these equally likely interpretations? Does neural processing differ between an endogenously perceived reversal of a physically unchanged ambiguous stimulus and an exogenously caused reversal of an unambiguous stimulus? A refined EEG paradigm to measure such endogenous events uncovered an early electrophysiological correlate of this spontaneous reversal, a negativity beginning at 160 ms. Comparing across nine electrode locations suggests that this component originates in early visual areas. An EEG component of similar shape and scalp distribution, but 50 ms earlier, was evoked by an external reversal of unambiguous figures. Perceptual disambiguation seems to be accomplished by the same structures that represent objects per se, and to occur early in the visual stream. This suggests that low-level mechanisms play a crucial role in resolving perceptual ambiguity.
Publikation
Psychophysiology
Band
41
Ausgabe
1
Seiten
1-8
Datum
2004 Jan
Zeitschriften-Abkürzung
Psychophysiology
Sprache
eng
ISSN
0048-5772
Extra
Place: United States
PMID: 14692995
Zitierung
Kornmeier, J., & Bach, M. (2004). Early neural activity in Necker-cube reversal: evidence for low-level processing of a gestalt phenomenon. Psychophysiology, 41(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1469-8986.2003.00126.x
Team
Thema
- Adult
- Brain Mapping
- Contingent Negative Variation/*physiology
- Depth Perception/*physiology
- Discrimination Learning/physiology
- *Electroencephalography
- Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology
- Female
- Humans
- Male
- Optical Illusions/*physiology
- Orientation/*physiology
- Pattern Recognition, Visual/*physiology
- Perceptual Closure/*physiology
- Reversal Learning/physiology
- Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
- Visual Cortex/physiology
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