The University of Queensland, Queensland Brain Institute, St Lucia, QLD, Australia.
The University of Queensland, Queensland Brain Institute, St Lucia, QLD, Australia; The University of Queensland, School of Psychology, St Lucia, QLD, Australia; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), Toronto, Canada.
Cortex. 2019 Aug;117:217-227. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2019.03.014. Epub 2019 Mar 26.
Under natural viewing conditions, visual stimuli are often obscured by occluding surfaces. To aid object recognition, the visual system actively reconstructs the missing information, as exemplified in the classic Kanizsa illusion, a phenomenon termed "modal completion". Single-cell recordings in monkeys have shown that neurons in early visual cortex respond to illusory contours, but it has proven difficult to measure the neural correlates of modal completion in humans. We used electroencephalography (EEG) to measure steady-state visual-evoked potentials (SSVEPs) from disks with quarter segments removed to induce an illusory shape (or rotated to eliminate the illusory square in control trials). Opposing pairs of inducers were tagged with one of two flicker frequencies (2.5 or 4 Hz). During stimulus presentations, participants performed an attention task at fixation that required them to judge the orientation of a briefly flashed central bar while ignoring congruent (same orientation) or incongruent (different orientation) flanker bars that appeared on or off the illusory surface. Importantly, the occurrence of any illusory shape was never task relevant. Frequency-based analyses revealed that SSVEP amplitudes were reliably enhanced for trials in which an illusory square appeared, relative to control trials, at 4, 5 and 8 Hz and at an intermodulation frequency of 13 Hz. Participants' reaction times in the flanker task were significantly slower for incongruent versus congruent trials, and this distractor interference effect occurred only in the presence of an illusory surface and not in the control condition. Our results reveal a robust neural correlate of modal completion in the human visual system and provide evidence that visual completion can affect attentional control processes as deployed in a flanker task.
在自然观察条件下,视觉刺激通常会被遮挡物遮挡。为了辅助物体识别,视觉系统会主动重建缺失的信息,这在经典的 Kanizsa 错觉中得到了例证,这种现象被称为“模态完成”。猴子的单细胞记录表明,早期视觉皮层的神经元对幻觉轮廓有反应,但在人类中很难测量模态完成的神经相关性。我们使用脑电图(EEG)测量带有四分之一部分缺失的圆盘的稳态视觉诱发电位(SSVEP),以产生幻觉形状(或旋转以消除对照试验中的幻觉正方形)。相反的诱导器对用两种闪烁频率之一标记(2.5 或 4 Hz)。在刺激呈现期间,参与者在注视时执行一项注意力任务,要求他们判断短暂闪烁的中央棒的方向,同时忽略出现在幻觉表面上或之外的一致(相同方向)或不一致(不同方向)的侧翼棒。重要的是,任何幻觉形状的出现都与任务无关。基于频率的分析表明,与对照试验相比,在 4、5 和 8 Hz 以及 13 Hz 的调制频率下,出现幻觉正方形的试验中 SSVEP 幅度可靠增强。参与者在侧翼任务中的反应时间对于不一致的试验明显慢于一致的试验,并且这种干扰效应仅在存在幻觉表面的情况下发生,而在对照条件下则不会发生。我们的结果揭示了人类视觉系统中模态完成的强大神经相关性,并提供了证据表明视觉完成可以影响在侧翼任务中部署的注意力控制过程。