Abstract

In multistability, a constant stimulus induces alternating perceptual interpretations. For many forms of visual multistability, the transition from one interpretation to another (“perceptual switch”) is accompanied by a dilation of the pupil. Here we ask whether the same holds for auditory multistability, specifically auditory streaming. Two tones were played in alternation, yielding four distinct interpretations: the tones can be perceived as one integrated percept (single sound source), or as segregated with either tone or both tones in the foreground. We found that the pupil dilates significantly around the time a perceptual switch is reported (“multistable condition”). When participants instead responded to actual stimulus changes that closely mimicked the multistable perceptual experience (“replay condition”), the pupil dilated more around such responses than in multistability. This still held when data were corrected for the pupil response to the stimulus change as such. Hence, active responses to an exogeneous stimulus change trigger a stronger or temporally more confined pupil dilation than responses to an endogenous perceptual switch. In another condition, participants randomly pressed the buttons used for reporting multistability. In Study 1, this “random condition” failed to sufficiently mimic the temporal pattern of multistability. By adapting the instructions, in Study 2 we obtained a response pattern more similar to the multistable condition. In this case, the pupil dilated significantly around the random button presses. Albeit numerically smaller, this pupil response was not significantly different from the multistable condition. While there are several possible explanations–related, e.g., to the decision to respond–this underlines the difficulty to isolate a purely perceptual effect in multistability. Our data extend previous findings from visual to auditory multistability. They highlight methodological challenges in interpreting such data and suggest possible approaches to meet them, including a novel stimulus to simulate the experience of perceptual switches in auditory streaming.

Highlights

  • Sensory information often contains ambiguities, such that the exact same input can be interpreted in different ways [1]

  • As in Study 1, we found evidence for a perceptual switch during auditory multistability to be accompanied by a temporary dilation of the pupil

  • The pupil dilation commences more than a second before the button press with which participants indicate their perceptual switch, which might be due to prolonged evidence accumulation during auditory perceptual decisions for such stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

Sensory information often contains ambiguities, such that the exact same input can be interpreted in different ways [1]. We do not notice the ambiguity because our perceptual system chooses the most probable or plausible interpretation, which dominates perception [2]. Pupillometry in auditory multistability probable, the phenomenon of perceptual multistability is observed [3]: Despite physically constant stimulation, perception alternates between the different interpretations (percepts). Following Leopold and Logothetis [3], perceptual switching during multistability can be characterized by its randomness (with respect to percept duration, as well as with respect to the percept sequence in case of more than two alternatives), its exclusivity (only one percept is experienced at any given moment) and its inevitability (switching cannot be avoided)

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