Identification of competing neural mechanisms underlying positive and negative perceptual hysteresis in the human visual system

Volume: 221, Pages: 117153 - 117153
Published: Nov 1, 2020
Abstract
Hysteresis is a well-known phenomenon in physics that relates changes in a system with its prior history. It is also part of human visual experience (perceptual hysteresis), and two different neural mechanisms might explain it: persistence (a cause of positive hysteresis), which forces to keep a current percept for longer, and adaptation (a cause of negative hysteresis), which in turn favors the switch to a competing percept early on. In this...
Paper Details
Title
Identification of competing neural mechanisms underlying positive and negative perceptual hysteresis in the human visual system
Published Date
Nov 1, 2020
Journal
Volume
221
Pages
117153 - 117153
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