Haarsma Joost, Hetenyi Dorottya, Kok Peter
Department of Imaging Neuroscience, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London WC1N 3AR, United Kingdom
Department of Imaging Neuroscience, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London WC1N 3AR, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2025 Jul 23;45(30):e1479242025. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1479-24.2025.
We often mistake visual noise for meaningful images, which sometimes appear as convincing as veridical percepts. This suggests considerable overlap between the mechanisms that underlie false and veridical perception. Yet, false percepts must arise at least in part from internally generated signals. Here, we apply multivariate analyses to human MEG data to study the overlap between veridical and false perception across two aspects of perceptual inference: discrimination of content (what did I see?) and detection (did I see something?). Male and female participants performed a visual discrimination task requiring them to indicate the orientation of a noisy grating, as well as their confidence in having seen a grating. Importantly, on 50% of trials, only a noise patch was presented. To exclude external signals driving false percepts, noise patches were carefully designed not to contain orientation signal. Still, participants occasionally confidently reported seeing a grating on noise only trials, i.e., false percepts. Decoding analyses revealed a sensory signal reflecting the content of these false percepts, despite no such grating being physically presented. Uniquely, high confidence false, but not veridical, percepts were associated with increased prestimulus high alpha/low beta [11-14 Hz] power, potentially reflecting enhanced reliance on top-down signaling on false percept trials. Later on, a shared neural code reflecting confidence in stimulus presence emerged for both false and veridical percepts. These findings suggest that false percepts arise through neural signals reflecting both sensory content and detection, similar to veridical percepts, with an increase in prestimulus alpha/beta power uniquely contributing to false percepts.
我们常常将视觉噪声误认作有意义的图像,这些图像有时看起来与真实感知一样令人信服。这表明在虚假感知和真实感知背后的机制之间存在相当大的重叠。然而,虚假感知至少部分必须源自内部产生的信号。在此,我们对人类脑磁图(MEG)数据应用多变量分析,以研究在感知推理的两个方面——内容辨别(我看到了什么?)和检测(我看到东西了吗?)——上真实感知与虚假感知之间的重叠。男性和女性参与者执行了一项视觉辨别任务,要求他们指出有噪声光栅的方向,以及他们看到光栅的信心。重要的是,在50%的试验中,只呈现了一个噪声斑块。为了排除驱动虚假感知的外部信号,噪声斑块被精心设计为不包含方向信号。尽管如此,参与者偶尔会在仅呈现噪声的试验中自信地报告看到了光栅,即虚假感知。解码分析揭示了一个反映这些虚假感知内容的感觉信号,尽管实际上并没有这样的光栅呈现。独特的是,高置信度的虚假感知而非真实感知与刺激前高α/低β[11 - 14赫兹]功率增加相关,这可能反映了在虚假感知试验中对自上而下信号的更强依赖。后来,一个反映对刺激存在信心的共享神经编码在虚假感知和真实感知中都出现了。这些发现表明,虚假感知通过反映感觉内容和检测的神经信号产生,与真实感知类似,刺激前α/β功率的增加独特地促成了虚假感知。