2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.10.001
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Alternative mode of presentation of Kanizsa figures sheds new light on the chronometry of the mechanisms underlying the perception of illusory figures

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Cited by 18 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Advances in signal analysis and source reconstruction have allowed these methods to provide not only correlates of sensory-perceptual phenomena, but also information regarding putative spatio-temporal brain mechanisms ( [20][21][22][23] Independent series of studies by a number of laboratories have focused on the question of when and where IC sensitivity first manifested (Figure 3). Murray et al [25] found that sensitivity to Kanizsa-type ICs onsets at ~90ms post-stimulus onset (see also [33] for initial evidence for such timing and [34] for an alternative paradigm yielding similar results), lagged ERP onset by ~40ms, and is localized first to the LOC (Figure 2). This "IC effect" has been shown to be an amplitude rather than a topographic modulation of the ERP that is superimposed upon the so-called N170 component [28]( [8,[35][36][37][38]), which is a peak of the visual evoked potential at ~150-200ms with a negative distribution of the parieto-occipital scalp with predominant sources within ventral and lateral occipital cortices.…”
Section: Electroencephalography and Magnetoencephalographymentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Advances in signal analysis and source reconstruction have allowed these methods to provide not only correlates of sensory-perceptual phenomena, but also information regarding putative spatio-temporal brain mechanisms ( [20][21][22][23] Independent series of studies by a number of laboratories have focused on the question of when and where IC sensitivity first manifested (Figure 3). Murray et al [25] found that sensitivity to Kanizsa-type ICs onsets at ~90ms post-stimulus onset (see also [33] for initial evidence for such timing and [34] for an alternative paradigm yielding similar results), lagged ERP onset by ~40ms, and is localized first to the LOC (Figure 2). This "IC effect" has been shown to be an amplitude rather than a topographic modulation of the ERP that is superimposed upon the so-called N170 component [28]( [8,[35][36][37][38]), which is a peak of the visual evoked potential at ~150-200ms with a negative distribution of the parieto-occipital scalp with predominant sources within ventral and lateral occipital cortices.…”
Section: Electroencephalography and Magnetoencephalographymentioning
confidence: 88%
“…If incompleteness alone was responsible for the N250, no difference would have been observed between the occluded and nonoccluded conditions, because they were both incomplete. In fact, the evidence indicates that completion of easily identifiable objects, such as this white square, is processed earlier than the N250, over the N1 or even the P1 (Brodeur, Lepore, et al, 2008;Murray, Foxe, Javitt, & Foxe, 2004;Pegna, Khateb, Murray, Landis, & Michel, 2002).…”
Section: N250 and Occlusion Processingmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In a very recent visual evoked potential (VEP) study using the notch mode of presentation, we have found a modulation of the P1 that was interpreted as being related to the perception of illusory figures [2]. In the classic mode of presentation, modulations of VEPs to illusory figures can begin early but they usually peak around the N1, the negative deflection that follows the P1 [5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…In the classic mode of presentation, modulations of VEPs to illusory figures can begin early but they usually peak around the N1, the negative deflection that follows the P1 [5]. The notch mode of presentation also induces an N1 modulation but in contrast to the greater N1 to illusory figures reported with the classic mode [5][11], the N1 is rather greater for the control figure [2].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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