Multistable perception: when bottom-up and top-down coincide.

Jürgen Kornmeier, Christine Maira Hein, Michael Bach
Author Information
  1. Jürgen Kornmeier: Univ.-Augenklinik, Killianstrasse 5, 79106 Freiburg, Germany. juergen.kornmeier@uni-freiburg.de

Abstract

During prolonged observation of an ambiguous figure sudden perceptual reversals occur, while the stimulus itself stays unchanged. There is a vivid debate about whether bottom-up or top-down mechanisms underlie this phenomenon. In the present study, we investigated the interrelation of two experimental factors: volitional control and discontinuous stimulus presentation. Both factors strongly modulate the rate of perceptual reversals and each is attributed either as top-down or bottom-up. We found that participants can apply specific strategies to volitionally increase and/or decrease the stability duration of each of the possible percepts according to the experimental instructions. When attempts of volitional control are combined with discontinuous stimulus presentation the effects are fully additive. Our results indicate that perceptual reversals can originate from different neural mechanisms on different time scales.

MeSH Term

Adult
Humans
Models, Psychological
Multivariate Analysis
Optical Illusions
Pattern Recognition, Visual

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0perceptualreversalsstimulusbottom-uptop-downmechanismsexperimentalvolitionalcontroldiscontinuouspresentationcandifferentprolongedobservationambiguousfiguresuddenoccurstaysunchangedvividdebatewhetherunderliephenomenonpresentstudyinvestigatedinterrelationtwofactors:factorsstronglymodulaterateattributedeitherfoundparticipantsapplyspecificstrategiesvolitionallyincreaseand/ordecreasestabilitydurationpossibleperceptsaccordinginstructionsattemptscombinedeffectsfullyadditiveresultsindicateoriginateneuraltimescalesMultistableperception:coincide

Similar Articles

Cited By