According to theoretical frameworks casting perception as inference, vision results from the integration of bottom-up visual input with top-down expectations. Under conditions of strongly degraded sensory input, this may occasionally result in false perceptions in the absence of a sensory signal, also termed “hallucinations.” Here, we investigated whether spontaneous prestimulus activity patterns in sensory circuits, which may embody a participant’s prior expectations, predispose the observer toward false perceptions. Specifically, we used fMRI to investigate whether the representational content of prestimulus activity in early visual cortex is linked to subsequent perception during a challenging detection task.Humanparticipants were asked to detect oriented gratings of a particular orientation that were embedded in noise. We found two characteristics of prestimulus activity that predisposed participants to hallucinations: overall lower prestimulus activity and a bias in the prestimulus activity patterns toward the to-be-detected (expected) grating. These results suggest that perceptual hallucinations may be due to an imprecise and biased state of sensory circuits preceding sensory evidence collection.
CITATION STYLE
Pajani, A., Kok, P., Kouider, S., & de Lange, F. P. (2015). Spontaneous activity patterns in primary visual cortex predispose to visual hallucinations. Journal of Neuroscience, 35(37), 12947–12953. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1520-15.2015
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