Transcranial alternating-current stimulation (tACS) for entraining alpha activity holds potential for influencing mental function, both in laboratory and clinical settings. While initial results of alpha entrainment are promising, questions remain regarding its translational potential—namely if tACS alpha entrainment is sufficiently robust to context and to what extent it can be upscaled to multi-electrode arrangements needed to direct currents into precise brain loci. We set out to explore these questions by administering alternating current through a multi-electrode montage (mtACS), while varying background task. A multi-electrode analog of previously employed anterior/posterior stimulation failed to replicate the reported alpha entrainment, suggesting that further work is required to understand the scope of applicability of tACS alpha entrainment.
In the course of perceptual organization, incomplete optical stimulation
can evoke the experience of complete objects with distinct perceptual
identities. According to a well-known principle of perceptual organization,
stimulus parts separated by shorter spatial distances are more likely to appear
as parts of the same perceptual identity. Whereas this principle of proximity
has been confirmed in many studies of perceptual grouping in static displays, we
show that it does not generalize to perception of object identity in dynamic
displays, where the parts are separated by spatial and temporal distances. We
use ambiguous displays which contain multiple moving parts and which can be
perceived two ways: as two large objects that gradually change their size or as
multiple smaller objects that rotate independent of one another. Grouping over
long and short distances corresponds to the perception of the respectively large
and small objects. We find that grouping over long distances is often preferred
to grouping over short distances, against predictions of the proximity
principle. Even though these effects are observed at high luminance contrast, we
show that they are consistent with results obtained at the threshold of
luminance contrast, in agreement with predictions of a theory of efficient
motion measurement. This is evidence that the perception of object identity can
be explained by a principle of neural economy rather than by the empirical
principle of proximity.
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