The chronometry of visual perception: Review of occipital TMS masking studies
Sack AT; de Graaf TA; Koivisto M; Jacobs C
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042715013
Tiivistelmä
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) continues to deliver on its promise as a research tool. In this review article we focus on the application of TMS to early visual cortex (V1, V2, V3) in studies of visual perception and visual awareness. Depending on the asynchrony between visual stimulus onset and TMS pulse (SOA), TMS can suppress visual perception, allowing one to track the time course of functional relevance (chronometry) of early visual cortex for vision. This procedure has revealed multiple masking effects ('dips'), some consistently (similar to+100 ms SOA) but others less so (similar to-50 ms, similar to-20 ms, similar to+30 ms, similar to+200 ms SOA). We review the state of TMS masking research, focusing on the evidence for these multiple dips, the relevance of several experimental parameters to the obtained 'masking curve', and the use of multiple measures of visual processing (subjective measures of awareness, objective discrimination tasks, priming effects). Lastly, we consider possible future directions for this field. We conclude that while TMS masking has yielded many fundamental insights into the chronometry of visual perception already, much remains unknown. Not only are there several temporal windows when TMS pulses can induce visual suppression, even the well-established 'classical' masking effect (similar to+100 ms) may reflect more than one functional visual process. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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