Literature DB >> 25754528

Pupil size tracks perceptual content and surprise.

Niels A Kloosterman1, Thomas Meindertsma, Anouk M van Loon, Victor A F Lamme, Yoram S Bonneh, Tobias H Donner.   

Abstract

Changes in pupil size at constant light levels reflect the activity of neuromodulatory brainstem centers that control global brain state. These endogenously driven pupil dynamics can be synchronized with cognitive acts. For example, the pupil dilates during the spontaneous switches of perception of a constant sensory input in bistable perceptual illusions. It is unknown whether this pupil dilation only indicates the occurrence of perceptual switches, or also their content. Here, we measured pupil diameter in human subjects reporting the subjective disappearance and re-appearance of a physically constant visual target surrounded by a moving pattern ('motion-induced blindness' illusion). We show that the pupil dilates during the perceptual switches in the illusion and a stimulus-evoked 'replay' of that illusion. Critically, the switch-related pupil dilation encodes perceptual content, with larger amplitude for disappearance than re-appearance. This difference in pupil response amplitude enables prediction of the type of report (disappearance vs. re-appearance) on individual switches (receiver-operating characteristic: 61%). The amplitude difference is independent of the relative durations of target-visible and target-invisible intervals and subjects' overt behavioral report of the perceptual switches. Further, we show that pupil dilation during the replay also scales with the level of surprise about the timing of switches, but there is no evidence for an interaction between the effects of surprise and perceptual content on the pupil response. Taken together, our results suggest that pupil-linked brain systems track both the content of, and surprise about, perceptual events.
© 2015 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  brain state; human; perceptual bistability; perceptual decision-making; pupillometry

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25754528     DOI: 10.1111/ejn.12859

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  41 in total

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3.  Pupil Sizes Scale with Attentional Load and Task Experience in a Multiple Object Tracking Task.

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Review 5.  Consciousness Regained: Disentangling Mechanisms, Brain Systems, and Behavioral Responses.

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6.  Retrieval Demands Adaptively Change Striatal Old/New Signals and Boost Subsequent Long-Term Memory.

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7.  Humans strategically shift decision bias by flexibly adjusting sensory evidence accumulation.

Authors:  Douglas D Garrett; Johannes Jacobus Fahrenfort; Niels A Kloosterman; Jan Willem de Gee; Markus Werkle-Bergner; Ulman Lindenberger
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8.  Surprise About Sensory Event Timing Drives Cortical Transients in the Beta Frequency Band.

Authors:  Thomas Meindertsma; Niels A Kloosterman; Andreas K Engel; Eric-Jan Wagenmakers; Tobias H Donner
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2018-07-20       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  A solid frame for the window on cognition: Modeling event-related pupil responses.

Authors:  Christoph W Korn; Dominik R Bach
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2016       Impact factor: 2.240

10.  Pupil Dilation and the Slow Wave ERP Reflect Surprise about Choice Outcome Resulting from Intrinsic Variability in Decision Confidence.

Authors:  Jan Willem de Gee; Camile M C Correa; Matthew Weaver; Tobias H Donner; Simon van Gaal
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 5.357

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