AbstractSpontaneous oscillations of brain activity can be synchronized by external stimuli, or by allocation of attention, and this can lead to small synchronous modulation of visual perceptual performance over time (Busch et al., 2009, Landau & Fries, 2012; Thut et al., 2012). Increasing evidence shows that motor processing affects perception in many ways and that planning an action triggers an internal signal (corollary discharge) that can strongly influence many aspects of perception, particularly the perception of time (Morrone et al., 2005; Tomassini et al., 2012; Yarrow et al., 2001). Here we investigated whether performing an action can generate rhythmic oscillations of visual contrast sensitivity, a property that is determined at ve...