Illusory object recognition is either perceptual or cognitive in origin depending on decision confidence

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 03-2023
Journal PLoS Biology
Article number e3002009
Volume | Issue number 21 | 3
Number of pages 26
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

We occasionally misinterpret ambiguous sensory input or report a stimulus when none is presented. It is unknown whether such errors have a sensory origin and reflect true perceptual illusions, or whether they have a more cognitive origin (e.g., are due to guessing), or both. When participants performed an error-prone and challenging face/house discrimination task, multivariate electroencephalography (EEG) analyses revealed that during decision errors (e.g., mistaking a face for a house), sensory stages of visual information processing initially represent the presented stimulus category. Crucially however, when participants were confident in their erroneous decision, so when the illusion was strongest, this neural representation flipped later in time and reflected the incorrectly reported percept. This flip in neural pattern was absent for decisions that were made with low confidence. This work demonstrates that decision confidence arbitrates between perceptual decision errors, which reflect true illusions of perception, and cognitive decision errors, which do not.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary files
Language English
Related dataset Results Data
Published at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002009
Downloads
journal.pbio.3002009 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Permalink to this page
Back