Elsevier

Vision Research

Volume 45, Issue 8, April 2005, Pages 955-960
Vision Research

The Necker cube—an ambiguous figure disambiguated in early visual processing

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2004.10.006Get rights and content
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Abstract

How can our percept spontaneously change while the observed object stays unchanged? This happens with ambiguous figures, like the Necker cube. Explanations favor either bottom–up factors in early visual processing, or top–down factors near awareness. The EEG has a high temporal resolution, so event related potentials (ERPs) may help to throw light on these alternative explanations. However, the precise point in time of neural correlates of perceptual reversal is difficult to estimate. We developed a paradigm that overcomes this problem and found an early (120 ms) occipital ERP signal correlated with endogenous perceptual reversal. Parallels of ambiguous-figure-reversal to binocular-rivalry-reversals are explored.

Keywords

Perceptual ambiguity
Ambiguous figures
Necker cube
EEG
ERP
Event related potentials

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