| Literature DB >> 26190990 |
Xuyan Yun1, Simon J Hazenberg2, Richard H A H Jacobs2, Jiang Qiu3, Rob van Lier2.
Abstract
We studied neural correlates accompanying the Fraser spiral illusion. The Fraser spiral illusion consists of twisted cords superimposed on a patchwork background arranged in concentric circles, which is typically perceived as a spiral. We tested four displays: the Fraser spiral illusion and three variants derived from it by orthogonally combining featural properties. In our stimuli, the shape of the cords comprised either concentric circles or a single spiral. The cords themselves consisted of black and white lines in parallel to the contour of the cords (i.e., parallel cords), or oblique line elements (i.e., twisted cords). The displays with twisted cords successfully induced illusory percepts, i.e., circles looked like spirals (the Fraser spiral illusion) and spirals looked like circles (i.e., a "reverse Fraser illusion"). We compared the event-related potentials in a Stimulus (Circle, Spiral) × Percept (Circle, Spiral) design. A significant main effect of Stimulus was found at the posterior scalp in an early component (P220-280) and a significant main effect of Percept was found over the anterior scalp in a later component (P350-450). Although the EEG data suggest stimulus-based processing in the posterior area in an early time window and percept-based processing in the later time window, an overall clear-cut stimulus-percept segregation was not found due to additional interaction effects. Instead, the data, especially in the later time window in the anterior area, point at differential processing for the condition comprising circle shapes but spiral percepts (i.e., the Fraser illusion).Entities:
Keywords: complexity; event-related potentials; fraser spiral illusion; illusion; shape perception
Year: 2015 PMID: 26190990 PMCID: PMC4489329 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1(A) Twisted Circles (twisted cords with concentric circles), (B) Twisted Spiral (twisted cords with spiral shape), (C) the Parallel Circles (parallel cords with concentric circles), (D) the Parallel Spiral (parallel cords with spiral shape). Note that these example stimuli differ slightly from the actual stimuli.
Figure 2The average proportion of different responses to the four stimuli. Spiral responses (dark gray) were made more often in the Twisted Circles than the other three stimuli. The mean proportions of spiral responses were also significantly different between the Twisted Spiral and the Parallel Circles, the Twisted Spiral and the Parallel Spiral, the Parallel Circles and the Parallel Spiral. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean.
Figure 3Grand average ERPs for waveforms distributed in anterior and posterior scalp with average amplitudes for the four conditions. Between 220–280 ms at the posterior ROI, spiral stimuli (blue lines) elicited a more positive component than circle stimuli (red lines). Between 350–450 ms at the anterior ROI, spiral perception (continuous lines) elicited a more positive component than circle perception (dotted lines).
Results: stimulus and percept effects in the anterior and posterior region (9-electrode ROIs).
| 160–220 ms | 220–280 ms | 350–450 ms | ANOVA factor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior | 0.282 (0.602) | 1.827 (0.193) | 1.941 (0.181) | Stimulus effect |
| 2.460 (0.134) | 0.956 (0.341) | 5.351 (0.033*) | Percept effect | |
| 0.053 (0.821) | 0.051 (0.824) | 4.583 (0.046*) | Stimulus × Percept | |
| Posterior | 2.237 (0.152) | 3.479 (0.079) | 0.823 (0.376) | Stimulus effect |
| 0.028 (0.868) | 0.339 (0.567) | 0.470 (0.502) | Percept effect | |
| 1.688 (0.210) | 8.836 (0.008*) | 0.042 (0.840) | Stimulus × Percept |
*Indicates significance at the 0.05 level.
Figure 4The mean voltages between 220–280 ms Posterior (A), and between 350–450 ms Anterior (B).