A Common Oscillator for Perceptual Rivalries?
- 1 March 2003
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perception
- Vol. 32 (3) , 295-305
- https://doi.org/10.1068/p3472
Abstract
Perceptual rivalry is an oscillation of conscious experience that takes place despite univarying, if ambiguous, sensory input. Much current interest is focused on the controversy over the neural site of binocular rivalry, a variety of perceptual rivalry for which a number of different cortical regions have been implicated. Debate continues over the relative role of higher levels of processing compared with primary visual cortex and the suggestion that different forms of rivalry involve different cortical areas. Here we show that the temporal pattern of disappearance and reappearance in motion-induced blindness (MIB) (Bonneh et al, 2001 Nature411 798–801) is highly correlated with the pattern of oscillation reported during binocular rivalry in the same individual. This correlation holds over a wide range of inter-individual variation. Temporal similarity in the two phenomena was strikingly confirmed by the effects of the hallucinogen LSD, which produced the same, extraordinary, pattern of increased rhythmicity in both kinds of perceptual oscillation. Furthermore, MIB demonstrates the two properties previously considered characteristic of binocular rivalry. Namely the distribution of dominance periods can be approximated by a gamma distribution and, in line with Levelt's second proposition of binocular rivalry, predominance of one perceptual phase can be increased through a reduction in the predominance time of the opposing phase. We conclude that (i) MIB is a form of perceptual rivalry, and (ii) there may be a common oscillator responsible for timing aspects of all forms of perceptual rivalry.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stimulus strength and dominance duration in perceptual bi-stability. Part II: from binocular rivalry to ambiguous motion displaysJournal of Vision, 2002
- Visual competitionNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
- Motion-induced blindness in normal observersNature, 2001
- Resolving perceptual ambiguityNature, 1996
- A neural theory of binocular rivalry.Psychological Review, 1989
- Stochastic properties of binocular rivalry alternationsPerception & Psychophysics, 1975
- NOTE ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF DOMINANCE TIMES IN BINOCULAR RIVALRYBritish Journal of Psychology, 1967
- THE ALTERNATION PROCESS IN BINOCULAR RIVALRYBritish Journal of Psychology, 1966
- Binocular rivalry.Psychological Review, 1909
- XVIII. Contributions to the physiology of vision. —Part the first. On some remarkable, and hitherto unobserved, phenomena of binocular visionPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1838