The dynamics of visual experience, an EEG Study of subjective pattern formation

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Date
2012-01-06Author
Elliott, Mark
Glennon, Mark
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Elliott, M.A., Twomey, D., & Glennon, M. (2012) 'The Dynamics of Visual Experience, an EEG Study of Subjective Pattern Formation'. Plos One, 7 (1):1-16.
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Abstract
Background: Since the origin of psychological science a number of studies have reported visual pattern formation in the
absence of either physiological stimulation or direct visual-spatial references. Subjective patterns range from simple
phosphenes to complex patterns but are highly specific and reported reliably across studies.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Using independent-component analysis (ICA) we report a reduction in amplitude
variance consistent with subjective-pattern formation in ventral posterior areas of the electroencephalogram (EEG). The EEG
exhibits significantly increased power at delta/theta and gamma-frequencies (point and circle patterns) or a series of highfrequency
harmonics of a delta oscillation (spiral patterns).
Conclusions/Significance: Subjective-pattern formation may be described in a way entirely consistent with identical pattern
formation in fluids or granular flows. In this manner, we propose subjective-pattern structure to be represented within a
spatio-temporal lattice of harmonic oscillations which bind topographically organized visual-neuronal assemblies by virtue
of low frequency modulation.