International audienceα oscillations (8-14 Hz) greatly influence brain activity, yet we generally do not experience them consciously: the world does not appear to oscillate. Dedicated strategies must exist in the brain to prevent these oscillations from disrupting normal processing. Could suitable stimuli fool these strategies and lead to the conscious experience of our own brain oscillations? We describe and explore a novel illusion in which the center of a static wheel stimulus (with 30-40 spokes) is experienced as flickering when viewed in the visual periphery. The key feature of this illusion is that the stimulus fluctuations are experienced as a regular and consistent flicker, which our human observers estimated at ∼9 Hz during a psych...
Like hallucinogenic drugs, full-field flickering visual stimulation produces regular, geometric hall...
International audienceThe occurrence of perceived reversed motion while observers view a continuous,...
Over the past decades, numerous studies have linked cortical gamma oscillations (∼30-100 Hz) to neur...
Continuously moving objects sometimes appear to spontaneously reverse their motion direction. The me...
Continuously moving objects sometimes appear to spontaneously reverse their motion direction. The me...
Continuously moving objects sometimes appear to spontaneously reverse their motion direction. The me...
AbstractThe eyes are always moving even during fixation, making the retinal image move concomitantly...
Visual illusions are often studied and analyzed to better understand the neural basis of perception....
International audienceIt has long been debated whether visual processing is, at least partially, a d...
In movies or on TV, a wheel can seem to rotate backwards, due to the temporal subsampling inherent i...
AbstractThe eyes are always moving even during fixation, making the retinal image move concomitantly...
International audienceAfter prolonged viewing of a continuous periodic motion stimulus at frequencie...
Moving borders defined by small luminance changes (or colour) can appear to jitter at a characterist...
Form hallucinations can be reliably induced using temporally modulated light within a specific frequ...
Flicker light stimulation (FLS) uses stroboscopic light on closed eyes to induce transient visual ha...
Like hallucinogenic drugs, full-field flickering visual stimulation produces regular, geometric hall...
International audienceThe occurrence of perceived reversed motion while observers view a continuous,...
Over the past decades, numerous studies have linked cortical gamma oscillations (∼30-100 Hz) to neur...
Continuously moving objects sometimes appear to spontaneously reverse their motion direction. The me...
Continuously moving objects sometimes appear to spontaneously reverse their motion direction. The me...
Continuously moving objects sometimes appear to spontaneously reverse their motion direction. The me...
AbstractThe eyes are always moving even during fixation, making the retinal image move concomitantly...
Visual illusions are often studied and analyzed to better understand the neural basis of perception....
International audienceIt has long been debated whether visual processing is, at least partially, a d...
In movies or on TV, a wheel can seem to rotate backwards, due to the temporal subsampling inherent i...
AbstractThe eyes are always moving even during fixation, making the retinal image move concomitantly...
International audienceAfter prolonged viewing of a continuous periodic motion stimulus at frequencie...
Moving borders defined by small luminance changes (or colour) can appear to jitter at a characterist...
Form hallucinations can be reliably induced using temporally modulated light within a specific frequ...
Flicker light stimulation (FLS) uses stroboscopic light on closed eyes to induce transient visual ha...
Like hallucinogenic drugs, full-field flickering visual stimulation produces regular, geometric hall...
International audienceThe occurrence of perceived reversed motion while observers view a continuous,...
Over the past decades, numerous studies have linked cortical gamma oscillations (∼30-100 Hz) to neur...