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Large EEG amplitude effects are highly similar across Necker cube, smiley, and abstract stimuli

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  • معلومة اضافية
    • Contributors:
      Neuropsychologie Cognitive et Physiopathologie de la Schizophrénie (NCPS); Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Hôpital Civil de Strasbourg; University of Freiburg [Freiburg]; Institute for Frontier Areas of Psychology and Mental Health [Fribourg, Allemagne]; We thank Neurex and the Deutsch-Franzoesische Hochschule (DFH) for their financial support of the PhD project of Ellen Joos. Further, the article processing charge was funded by the Baden-Wuerttemberg Ministry of Science, Research and Art and the University of Freiburg in the funding programme Open Access Publishing.; Bodescot, Myriam
    • بيانات النشر:
      Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2020.
    • الموضوع:
      2020
    • نبذة مختصرة :
      International audience; The information available through our senses is noisy, incomplete, and ambiguous. Our perceptual systems have to resolve this ambiguity to construct stable and reliable percepts. Previous EEG studies found large amplitude differences in two event-related potential (ERP) components 200 and 400 ms after stimulus onset when comparing ambiguous with disambiguated visual information ("ERP Ambiguity Effects"). These effects so far generalized across classical ambiguous figures from different visual categories at lower (geometry, motion) and intermediate (Gestalt perception) levels. The present study aimed to examine whether these ERP Effects are restricted to ambiguous figures or whether they also occur for different degrees of visibility. Smiley faces with low and high visibility of emotional expressions, as well as abstract figures with low and high visibility of a target curvature were presented. We thus compared ambiguity effects in geometric cube stimuli with visibility in emotional faces, and with visibility in abstract figures. ERP Effects were replicated for the geometric stimuli and very similar ERP Effects were found for stimuli with emotional face expressions but also for abstract figures. Conclusively, the ERP amplitude effects generalize across fundamentally different stimulus categories and show highly similar effects for different degrees of stimulus ambiguity and stimulus visibility. We postulate the existence of a high-level/meta-perceptual evaluation instance, beyond sensory details, that estimates the certainty of a perceptual decision. The ERP Effects may reflect differences in evaluation results.
    • File Description:
      application/pdf
    • ISSN:
      1932-6203
    • Rights:
      OPEN
    • الرقم المعرف:
      edsair.pmid.dedup....eea3346393bba747edad5f2d24aa8b26