Fast cyclic stimulus flashing modulates perception of bi-stable figure
Author(s) -
Henrikas Vaitkevičius,
Vygandas Vanagas,
Alvydas Šoliūnas,
Algimantas Švėgžda,
Remigijus Bliumas,
Rytis Stanikûnas,
Janus J. Kulikowski
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.6011
Subject(s) - binocular rivalry , stimulus (psychology) , perception , rhythm , visual perception , subliminal stimuli , psychology , audiology , alternation (linguistics) , time perception , neuroscience , communication , cognitive psychology , physics , medicine , acoustics , linguistics , philosophy
Many experiments have demonstrated that the rhythms in the brain influence the initial perceptual information processing. We investigated whether the alternation rate of the perception of a Necker cube depends on the frequency and duration of a flashing Necker cube. We hypothesize that synchronization between the external rhythm of a flashing stimulus and the internal rhythm of neuronal processing should change the alternation rate of a Necker cube. Knowing how a flickering stimulus with a given frequency and duration affects the alternation rate of bistable perception, we could estimate the frequency of the internal neuronal processing. Our results show that the perception time of the dominant stimulus depends on the frequency or duration of the flashing stimuli. The duration of the stimuli, at which the duration of the perceived image was maximal, was repeated periodically at 4 ms intervals. We suppose that such results could be explained by the existence of an internal rhythm of 125 cycles/s for bistable visual perception. We can also suppose that it is not the stimulus duration but the precise timing of the moments of switching on of external stimuli to match the internal stimuli which explains our experimental results. Similarity between the effects of flashing frequency on alternation rate of stimuli perception in present and previously performed experiment on binocular rivalry support the existence of a common mechanism for binocular rivalry and monocular perception of ambiguous figures.
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