Elsevier

Behavioural Brain Research

Volume 271, 1 September 2014, Pages 294-301
Behavioural Brain Research

Review
The role of alpha oscillations for illusory perception

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2014.06.015Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • We review studies showing a crucial role of alpha oscillations for illusory perception.

  • Power and/or phase of alpha oscillations influence illusory perception.

  • Alpha oscillations influence visual, auditory and multisensory illusions.

  • Modulations of alpha oscillations are found before and/or during illusory perception.

Abstract

Alpha oscillations are a prominent electrophysiological signal measured across a wide range of species and cortical and subcortical sites. Alpha oscillations have been viewed for a long time as an “idling” rhythm, purely reflecting inactive sites. Despite earlier evidence from neurophysiology, awareness that alpha oscillations can substantially influence perception and behavior has grown only recently in cognitive neuroscience. Evidence for an active role of alpha for perception comes mainly from several visual, near-threshold experiments. In the current review, we extend this view by summarizing studies showing how alpha-defined brain states relate to illusory perception, i.e. cases of perceptual reports that are not “objectively” verifiable by distinct stimuli or stimulus features. These studies demonstrate that ongoing or prestimulus alpha oscillations substantially influence the perception of auditory, visual or multisensory illusions.

Keywords

MEG
EEG
Auditory
Visual
Multisensory
Excitability

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