Literature DB >> 22448914

Elementary visual hallucinations and their relationships to neural pattern-forming mechanisms.

Vincent A Billock1, Brian H Tsou.   

Abstract

An extraordinary variety of experimental (e.g., flicker, magnetic fields) and clinical (epilepsy, migraine) conditions give rise to a surprisingly common set of elementary hallucinations, including spots, geometric patterns, and jagged lines, some of which also have color, depth, motion, and texture. Many of these simple hallucinations fall into a small number of perceptual geometries-the Klüver forms-that (via a nonlinear mapping from retina to cortex) correspond to even simpler sets of oriented stripes of cortical activity (and their superpositions). Other simple hallucinations (phosphenes and fortification auras) are linked to the Klüver forms and to pattern-forming cortical mechanisms by their spatial and temporal scales. The Klüver cortical activity patterns are examples of self-organized pattern formation that arise from nonlinear dynamic interactions between excitatory and inhibitory cortical neurons; with reasonable modifications, this model accounts for a wide range of hallucinated patterns. The Klüver cortical activity patterns are a subset of autonomous spatiotemporal cortical patterns, some of which have been studied with functional imaging techniques. Understanding the interaction of these intrinsic patterns with stimulus-driven cortical activity is an important problem in neuroscience. In line with this, hallucinatory pattern formation interacts with physical stimuli, and many conditions that induce hallucinations show interesting interactions with one another. Both types of interactions are predictable from neural and psychophysical principles such as localized processing, excitatory-inhibitory neural circuits, lateral inhibition, simultaneous and sequential contrast, saccadic suppression, and perceptual opponency. Elementary hallucinations arise from familiar mechanisms stimulated in unusual ways.

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Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22448914     DOI: 10.1037/a0027580

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Bull        ISSN: 0033-2909            Impact factor:   17.737


  6 in total

1.  A bidirectional link between brain oscillations and geometric patterns.

Authors:  Federica Mauro; Antonino Raffone; Rufin VanRullen
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2015-05-20       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Spatially-global integration of closed, fragmented contours by finding the shortest-path in a log-polar representation.

Authors:  TaeKyu Kwon; Kunal Agrawal; Yunfeng Li; Zygmunt Pizlo
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2015-08-14       Impact factor: 1.886

3.  Hallucinations on demand: the utility of experimentally induced phenomena in hallucination research.

Authors:  Sebastian Rogers; Rebecca Keogh; Joel Pearson
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2020-12-14       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  Boundary element fast multipole method for modeling electrical brain stimulation with voltage and current electrodes.

Authors:  Sergey N Makarov; Laleh Golestanirad; William A Wartman; Bach Thanh Nguyen; Gregory M Noetscher; Jyrki P Ahveninen; Kyoko Fujimoto; Konstantin Weise; Aapo R Nummenmaa
Journal:  J Neural Eng       Date:  2021-08-19       Impact factor: 5.043

5.  Sensory dynamics of visual hallucinations in the normal population.

Authors:  Joel Pearson; Rocco Chiou; Sebastian Rogers; Marcus Wicken; Stewart Heitmann; Bard Ermentrout
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2016-10-11       Impact factor: 8.140

6.  The Psychophysical Assessment of Hierarchical Magno-, Parvo- and Konio-Cellular Visual Stream Dysregulations in Migraineurs.

Authors:  Michael F Wesner; James Brazeau
Journal:  Eye Brain       Date:  2019-11-29
  6 in total

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