A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study.
Hypnotic suggestions may change the perceived color of objects. Given that chromatic stimulus information is processed rapidly and automatically by the visual system, how can hypnotic suggestions affect perceived colors in a seemingly immediate fashion? We studied the mechanisms of such color altera...
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doaj-f00b108605c441dfb76e3719ce7bc8582020-11-24T21:44:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0188e7090010.1371/journal.pone.0070900A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study.Mika KoivistoSvetlana KirjanenAntti RevonsuoSakari KallioHypnotic suggestions may change the perceived color of objects. Given that chromatic stimulus information is processed rapidly and automatically by the visual system, how can hypnotic suggestions affect perceived colors in a seemingly immediate fashion? We studied the mechanisms of such color alterations by measuring electroencephalography in two highly suggestible participants as they perceived briefly presented visual shapes under posthypnotic color alternation suggestions such as "all the squares are blue". One participant consistently reported seeing the suggested colors. Her reports correlated with enhanced evoked upper beta-band activity (22 Hz) 70-120 ms after stimulus in response to the shapes mentioned in the suggestion. This effect was not observed in a control condition where the participants merely tried to simulate the effects of the suggestion on behavior. The second participant neither reported color alterations nor showed the evoked beta activity, although her subjective experience and event-related potentials were changed by the suggestions. The results indicate a preconscious mechanism that first compares early visual input with a memory representation of the suggestion and consequently triggers the color alteration process in response to the objects specified by the suggestion. Conscious color experience is not purely the result of bottom-up processing but it can be modulated, at least in some individuals, by top-down factors such as hypnotic suggestions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3733835?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mika Koivisto Svetlana Kirjanen Antti Revonsuo Sakari Kallio |
spellingShingle |
Mika Koivisto Svetlana Kirjanen Antti Revonsuo Sakari Kallio A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Mika Koivisto Svetlana Kirjanen Antti Revonsuo Sakari Kallio |
author_sort |
Mika Koivisto |
title |
A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. |
title_short |
A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. |
title_full |
A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. |
title_fullStr |
A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. |
title_full_unstemmed |
A preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. |
title_sort |
preconscious neural mechanism of hypnotically altered colors: a double case study. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
Hypnotic suggestions may change the perceived color of objects. Given that chromatic stimulus information is processed rapidly and automatically by the visual system, how can hypnotic suggestions affect perceived colors in a seemingly immediate fashion? We studied the mechanisms of such color alterations by measuring electroencephalography in two highly suggestible participants as they perceived briefly presented visual shapes under posthypnotic color alternation suggestions such as "all the squares are blue". One participant consistently reported seeing the suggested colors. Her reports correlated with enhanced evoked upper beta-band activity (22 Hz) 70-120 ms after stimulus in response to the shapes mentioned in the suggestion. This effect was not observed in a control condition where the participants merely tried to simulate the effects of the suggestion on behavior. The second participant neither reported color alterations nor showed the evoked beta activity, although her subjective experience and event-related potentials were changed by the suggestions. The results indicate a preconscious mechanism that first compares early visual input with a memory representation of the suggestion and consequently triggers the color alteration process in response to the objects specified by the suggestion. Conscious color experience is not purely the result of bottom-up processing but it can be modulated, at least in some individuals, by top-down factors such as hypnotic suggestions. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3733835?pdf=render |
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