Intracranial Recordings of Occipital Cortex Responses to Illusory Visual Events.
Maartje C de JongRalph J M HendriksMariska J VansteenselMathijs RaemaekersFrans A J VerstratenNick F RamseyCasper J ErkelensFrans S S LeijtenRaymond van EePublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Ambiguous visual stimuli elicit different perceptual interpretations over time, creating the illusion that a constant stimulus is changing. The literature on the neural correlates of conscious visual perception remains inconclusive regarding the extent to which such spontaneous changes in perception involve sensory brain regions. In an attempt to bridge the gap between existing animal and human studies, we recorded from intracranial electrodes placed on the human occipital lobe. We compared two different kinds of ambiguous stimuli, binocular rivalry and the phenomenon of ambiguous structure-from-motion, enabling generalization of our findings across different stimuli. Our results indicate that spontaneous and stimulus-induced changes in perception (i.e., "illusory" and "real" changes in the stimulus, respectively) may involve sensory regions to a similar extent.