The brain uses its intrinsic dynamics to actively predict observed sensory inputs, especially under perceptual ambiguity. However, it remains unclear how this inference process is neurally implemented in biasing perception of ambiguous inputs towards the predicted percepts. The process of perceptual inference can be well illustrated by the phenomenon of bistable apparent motion in the Ternus display, in which subjective perception spontaneously alternates between element motion (EM) and group motion (GM) percepts depending on whether two consecutively presented frames are grouped over time or not. The frequency of alpha-band oscillations has long been hypothesized to gate the temporal window of perceptual grouping over time. Under this hypo...
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
Our brain does not process incoming sensory stimuli mechanistically. Instead the current brain state...
The brain uses its intrinsic dynamics to actively predict observed sensory inputs, especially under ...
Grabot L, Kayser C. Alpha Activity Reflects the Magnitude of an Individual Bias in Human Perception....
Grabot L, Kayser C. Alpha Activity Reflects the Magnitude of an Individual Bias in Human Perception....
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
none8siIt is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. Ho...
none8siIt is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. Ho...
none8siIt is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. Ho...
Grabot L, Kayser C, van Wassenhove V. Postdiction: when temporal regularity drives space perception ...
Oscillations are ubiquitous in the brain. Alpha oscillations in particular have been proposed to pla...
Near-threshold perception is a paradigm case of awareness diverging from reality - the perception of...
Rhythmic neural activity in the alpha band (8-13 Hz) is thought to have an important role in the sel...
Rhythmic neural activity in the alpha band (8-13 Hz) is thought to have an important role in the sel...
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
Our brain does not process incoming sensory stimuli mechanistically. Instead the current brain state...
The brain uses its intrinsic dynamics to actively predict observed sensory inputs, especially under ...
Grabot L, Kayser C. Alpha Activity Reflects the Magnitude of an Individual Bias in Human Perception....
Grabot L, Kayser C. Alpha Activity Reflects the Magnitude of an Individual Bias in Human Perception....
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
none8siIt is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. Ho...
none8siIt is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. Ho...
none8siIt is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. Ho...
Grabot L, Kayser C, van Wassenhove V. Postdiction: when temporal regularity drives space perception ...
Oscillations are ubiquitous in the brain. Alpha oscillations in particular have been proposed to pla...
Near-threshold perception is a paradigm case of awareness diverging from reality - the perception of...
Rhythmic neural activity in the alpha band (8-13 Hz) is thought to have an important role in the sel...
Rhythmic neural activity in the alpha band (8-13 Hz) is thought to have an important role in the sel...
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
It is commonly held that what we see and what we believe we see are overlapping phenomena. However, ...
Our brain does not process incoming sensory stimuli mechanistically. Instead the current brain state...