scholarly journals History-dependent changes of Gamma distribution in multistable perception

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Pastukhov ◽  
Malin Styrnal ◽  
Claus-Christian Carbon

AbstractMultistable perception – spontaneous switches of perception when viewing a stimulus compatible with several distinct interpretations – is often characterized by the distribution of durations of individual dominance phases. For continuous viewing conditions, these distributions look remarkably similar for various multistable displays and are typically described using Gamma distribution. Moreover, durations of individual dominance phases show a subtle but consistent dependence on prior perceptual experience with longer dominance phases tending to increase the duration of the following ones, whereas the shorter dominance leads to similarly shorter durations. One way to generate similar switching behavior in a model is by using a combination of cross-inhibition, self-adaptation, and neural noise with multiple useful models being built on this principle. Here, we take a closer look at the history-dependent changes in the distribution of durations of dominance phases. Specifically, we used Gamma distribution and allowed both its parameters – shape and scale – to be linearly dependent on the prior perceptual experience at two timescales. We fit a hierarchical Bayesian model to five datasets that included binocular rivalry, Necker cube, and kinetic-depth effects displays, as well as data on binocular rivalry in children and on binocular rivalry with modulated contrast. For all datasets, we found a consistent change of the distribution shape with higher levels of perceptual history, which can be viewed as a proxy for perceptual adaptation, leading to a more normal-like shape of the Gamma distribution. When comparing real observers to matched simulated dominance phases generated by a spiking neural model of bistability, we found that although it matched the positive history-dependent shift in the shape parameter, it also predicted a negative change of scale parameter that did not match empirical data. We argue that our novel analysis method, the implementation is available freely at the online repository, provides additional constraints for computational models of multistability.Author SummaryMultistable perception occurs when one continuously views a figure that can be seen in two distinct ways. A classic old-young woman painting, a face-vase figure, or a Necker cube are examples easy to find online. The endless spontaneous switches of your perception between the alternatives inform us about the interplay of various forces that shape it. One way to characterize these switches is by looking at their timing: How long was a particular image dominant, how did that reflect what you have seen previously, the focus of your attention, or the version of the figure that we showed you? This knowledge allows us to build models of perception and test them against the data we collected. As models grow more elaborate, we need to make tests more elaborate as well and for this, we require more precise and specific ways to characterize your perception. Here, we demonstrate how your recent perceptual experience – which of the alternative images did you see and for how long – predicts subtle but consistent changes in the shape of the distribution that describes perceptual switching. We believe it to be a more stringent test by demonstrating how a classical model of bistability fails on it.

Author(s):  
John O’Dea

This chapter defends a solution to the problem of variable appearances that co-occur with perceptual constancy. In conditions which are non-ideal, yet within the range of perceptual constancy, we see things veridically despite a puzzling “appearance” which is suggestive of a non-veridical state of affairs. For example, a tilted coin is often taken to have an “elliptical appearance”. This chapter defends Gestalt-shift approach, according to which these appearances are in fact illusory, but not part of normal perceptual experience. The experience of ellipticality when viewing a tilted coin, it is argued, arises from something like a brief and unstable Gestalt shift to a different visual interpretation of the scene, of the kind that E. H. Gombrich argued artists invoke when painting a three-dimensional scene on a flat canvas. Recent empirical work on multistable perception is used to show how this might work.


1998 ◽  
Vol 353 (1377) ◽  
pp. 1801-1818 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
N. K. Logothetis

Figures that can be seen in more than one way are invaluable tools for the study of the neural basis of visual awareness, because such stimuli permit the dissociation of the neural responses that underlie what we perceive at any given time from those forming the sensory representation of a visual pattern. To study the former type of responses, monkeys were subjected to binocular rivalry, and the response of neurons in a number of different visual areas was studied while the animals reported their alternating percepts by pulling levers. Perception–related modulations of neural activity were found to occur to different extents in different cortical visual areas. The cells that were affected by suppression were almost exclusively binocular, and their proportion was found to increase in the higher processing stages of the visual system. The strongest correlations between neural activity and perception were observed in the visual areas of the temporal lobe. A strikingly large number of neurons in the early visual areas remained active during the perceptual suppression of the stimulus, a finding suggesting that conscious visual perception might be mediated by only a subset of the cells exhibiting stimulus selective responses. These physiological findings, together with a number of recent psychophysical studies, offer a new explanation of the phenomenon of binocular rivalry. Indeed, rivalry has long been considered to be closely linked with binocular fusion and stereopsis, and the sequences of dominance and suppression have been viewed as the result of competition between the two monocular channels. The physiological data presented here are incompatible with this interpretation. Rather than reflecting interocular competition, the rivalry is most probably between the two different central neural representations generated by the dichoptically presented stimuli. The mechanisms of rivalry are probably the same as, or very similar to, those underlying multistable perception in general, and further physiological studies might reveal a much about the neural mechanisms of our perceptual organization.


Author(s):  
Mark Reybrouck

This chapter elaborates on the concepts of music information and information processing by bringing together the fields of computation, cybernetics and the dynamic systems approach. It conceives of music users as autonomous agents that behave as adaptive devices that construct their musical knowledge as the outcome of continuous epistemic interactions with the sonic world. As such, it challenges the classical symbolic-conceptual approach to musical information in terms of static, discrete and objective categories in favor of a trans-classical model that relies on subjective, process-like and non-discrete categories of meaning. In an attempt to go beyond traditional dichotomies, it proposes a hybrid perceptual-conceptual approach that does justice both to the richness and fullness of perceptual experience and the plasticity of mental operations in a kind of symbolic play.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (30) ◽  
pp. 14811-14812 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oakyoon Cha ◽  
Randolph Blake

Evidence for perceptual periodicity emerges from studies showing periodic fluctuations in visual perception and decision making that are accompanied by neural oscillations in brain activity. We have uncovered signs of periodicity in the time course of binocular rivalry, a widely studied form of multistable perception. This was done by analyzing time series data contained in an unusually large dataset of rivalry state durations associated with states of exclusive monocular dominance and states of mixed perception during transitions between exclusive dominance. Identifiable within the varying durations of dynamic mixed perception are rhythmic clusters of durations whose incidence falls within the frequency band associated with oscillations in neural activity accompanying periodicity in perceptual judgments. Endogenous neural oscillations appear to be especially impactful when perception is unusually confounding.


Perception ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 22-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
P H C Vallen ◽  
P R Snoeren ◽  
Ch M M de Weert

Thirty years ago, Levelt (1967 British Journal of Psychology58 143 – 145) fitted the distribution of dominance times in binocular rivalry with the gamma distribution (the distribution function of waiting times for N random events with process speed lambda). Ever since, the gamma distribution has been used to describe the rivalry phase durations, without an explanatory underlying mechanism being given. Although Levelt suggested lambda to be proportional to the stimulus strength (eg contrast, luminance, blur, amount of contour) and N to be ‘successive neural spikes’, this suggestion has never been tested. The purpose of this study was to test whether or not N and lambda represent characteristics of the observer and the stimulus, respectively. To collect the data as accurately as possible, we performed a large number of measurements involving different designs and stimuli. In contrast to previous experiments, collected data were not pooled but were compared within each subject. We tested the hypothesis by collecting time intervals from subjects responding to numerous conditions in which disk - ring stimuli were varied in contrast, blur, or amount of contour in one eye.


Author(s):  
Neil D. B. Bruce ◽  
John K. Tsotsos

The stereo correspondence problem is a topic that has been the subject of considerable research effort. What has not yet been considered is an analogue of stereo correspondence in the domain of attention. In this chapter, the authors bring this problem to light, revealing important implications for computational models of attention, and in particular, how these implications constrain the problem of computational modeling of attention. A model is described which addresses attention in the stereo domain, and it is revealed that a variety of behaviors observed in binocular rivalry experiments are consistent with the model’s behavior. Finally, the authors consider how constraints imposed by stereo vision may suggest analogous constraints in other non-stereo feature domains with significant consequence to computational models of attention.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy R. Zou ◽  
Daniela Elizabeth Muñoz Lopez ◽  
Sheri L Johnson ◽  
Anne Collins

Impulsivity is defined as a trait-like tendency to engage in rash actions that are poorly thought out or expressed in an untimely manner. Previous research has found that impulsivity relates to deficits in decision making, in particular when it necessitates executive control or reward outcomes. Reinforcement learning (RL) relies on the ability to integrate valenced outcomes to make good decisions, and has recently be shown to often recruit executive function; as such, it is unsurprising that impulsivity has been studied in the context of RL. However, how impulsivity relates to the mechanisms of RL remains unclear. We aimed to investigate the relationship between impulsivity and learning in a reward-driven learning task with probabilistic feedback and reversal known to recruit executive function. Based on prior literature in clinical populations, we predicted that higher impulsivity would be associated with poorer performance on the task, driven by more frequent switching following unrewarded outcomes. Our results did not support this prediction, but more advanced, trial-history dependent analyses revealed specific effects of impulsivity on switching behavior following consecutive unrewarded trials. Computational modeling captured group-level behavior, but not impulsivity results. Our results support previous findings highlighting the importance of sensitivity to negative outcomes in understanding how impulsivity relates to learning, but indicate that this may stem from more complex strategies than usually considered in computational models of learning. This should be an important target for future research.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Cosmelli ◽  
Evan Thompson

Binocular rivalry provides a useful situation for studying the relation between the temporal flow of conscious experience and the temporal dynamics of neural activity. After proposing a phenomenological framework for understanding temporal aspects of consciousness, we review experimental research on multistable perception and binocular rivalry, singling out various methodological, theoretical, and empirical aspects of this research relevant to studying the flow of experience. We then review an experimental study from our group explicitly concerned with relating the temporal dynamics of rivalrous experience to the temporal dynamics of cortical activity. Drawing attention to the importance of dealing with ongoing activity and its inherent changing nature at both phenomenological and neurodynamical levels, we argue that the notions of recurrence and variability are pertinent to understanding rivalry in particular and the flow of experience in general.


PeerJ ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. e6011
Author(s):  
Henrikas Vaitkevicius ◽  
Vygandas Vanagas ◽  
Alvydas Soliunas ◽  
Algimantas Svegzda ◽  
Remigijus Bliumas ◽  
...  

Many experiments have demonstrated that the rhythms in the brain influence the initial perceptual information processing. We investigated whether the alternation rate of the perception of a Necker cube depends on the frequency and duration of a flashing Necker cube. We hypothesize that synchronization between the external rhythm of a flashing stimulus and the internal rhythm of neuronal processing should change the alternation rate of a Necker cube. Knowing how a flickering stimulus with a given frequency and duration affects the alternation rate of bistable perception, we could estimate the frequency of the internal neuronal processing. Our results show that the perception time of the dominant stimulus depends on the frequency or duration of the flashing stimuli. The duration of the stimuli, at which the duration of the perceived image was maximal, was repeated periodically at 4 ms intervals. We suppose that such results could be explained by the existence of an internal rhythm of 125 cycles/s for bistable visual perception. We can also suppose that it is not the stimulus duration but the precise timing of the moments of switching on of external stimuli to match the internal stimuli which explains our experimental results. Similarity between the effects of flashing frequency on alternation rate of stimuli perception in present and previously performed experiment on binocular rivalry support the existence of a common mechanism for binocular rivalry and monocular perception of ambiguous figures.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Günzel ◽  
Felix Kühnl ◽  
Katharina Arnold ◽  
Sven Findeiß ◽  
Christina Weinberg ◽  
...  

AbstractGene regulation in prokaryotes often depends on RNA elements such as riboswitches or RNA thermometers located in the 5’ untranslated region of mRNA. Rearrangements of the RNA structure in response, e. g., to the binding of small molecules or ions control translational initiation or premature termination of transcription and thus mRNA expression. Such structural responses are amenable to computational modeling, making it possible to rationally design synthetic riboswitches for a given aptamer. Starting from an artificial aptamer, we construct the first synthetic transcriptional riboswitches that respond to the antibiotic neomycin. We show that the switching behavior in vivo critically depends not only on the sequence of the riboswitch itself, but also on its sequence context. We therefore developed in silico methods to predict the impact of the context, making it possible to adapt the design and to rescue non-functional riboswitches. We furthermore analyze the influence of 5’ hairpins with varying stability on neomycin riboswitch activity. Our data highlight the limitations of a simple plug-and-play approach in the design of complex genetic circuits and demonstrate that detailed computational models significantly simplify, improve, and automate the design of transcriptional circuits. Our design software is available under a free license on Github.1


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