4.5 Article

Conflict monitoring and attentional adjustment during binocular rivalry

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages 138-153

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15554

Keywords

alpha oscillations; attention allocation; binocular rivalry; bistable perception; cognitive conflict; EEG; functional inhibition; theta oscillations; visual awareness

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [PID2019-108531GB-I00]
  2. AGAUR Generalitat de Catalunya [2017 SGR 1545, FI-DGR 2019]
  3. European Union [794649]
  4. Ramon y Cajal [RYC2019-027538-I]
  5. European Regional Development Fund
  6. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [794649] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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The study reveals that in competitive perceptual representations, the brain undergoes neural activation similar to cognitive conflict, leading to fluctuations between different perceptual outcomes, indicating that conflict monitoring mechanisms occur during perceptual competition. Fronto-medial theta oscillations increase before and decrease after perceptual alternations, while parieto-occipital alpha oscillations show an inverse pattern, reflecting changes in interocular inhibition levels during perceptual switches.
To make sense of ambiguous and, at times, fragmentary sensory input, the brain must rely on a process of active interpretation. At any given moment, only one of several possible perceptual representations prevails in our conscious experience. Our hypothesis is that the competition between alternative representations induces a pattern of neural activation resembling cognitive conflict, eventually leading to fluctuations between different perceptual outcomes in the case of steep competition. To test this hypothesis, we probed changes in perceptual awareness between competing images using binocular rivalry. We drew our predictions from the conflict monitoring theory, which holds that cognitive control is invoked by the detection of conflict during information processing. Our results show that fronto-medial theta oscillations (5-7 Hz), an established electroencephalography (EEG) marker of conflict, increases right before perceptual alternations and decreases thereafter, suggesting that conflict monitoring occurs during perceptual competition. Furthermore, to investigate conflict resolution via attentional engagement, we looked for a neural marker of perceptual switches as by parieto-occipital alpha oscillations (8-12 Hz). The power of parieto-occipital alpha displayed an inverse pattern to that of fronto-medial theta, reflecting periods of high interocular inhibition during stable perception, and low inhibition around moments of perceptual change. Our findings aim to elucidate the relationship between conflict monitoring mechanisms and perceptual awareness.

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