Discretized Theta-Rhythm Perception Revealed by Moving Stimuli

运动刺激揭示离散化的θ节律感知

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Abstract

Despite the subjective continuity of perception over time, increasing evidence suggests that the human nervous system samples sensory information periodically, a finding strongly exemplified by discretized perception in the alpha-rhythm frequency band. More recently, studies have revealed a theta-band cyclic process that manifests itself as periodical fluctuations in behavioral performance. Here, we used a simple stimulus to demonstrate that the theta-cyclic system can produce a vivid experience of slow discrete visual sampling: a Gabor texture pattern appears as a series of flickering snapshots if its spatial window moves continuously over a carrier grating that remains still or drifts continuously in the opposite direction. While the perceptual magnitude of this illusory saltation varied with the speed difference between grating and window components in head-centered coordinates, the perceived rhythm of saltation remained nearly constant (3-8 Hz) over a wide range of stimulus parameters. Results provide further evidence that the slow cyclic neural processes play a critical role not only in attentional task performance but also in conscious perception.

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