Previous research has linked endogenous alpha oscillations (∼7–13 Hz) to temporal integration windows in visual perception, with higher individual alpha frequency predicting improved temporal segregation. Here, we investigated whether alpha-rhythmic temporal integration is a factor in visual crowding and whether this relationship is mediated by spatial grouping mechanisms. Forty-seven participants performed a Vernier discrimination task, in which we manipulated both the stimulus onset asynchrony between flankers and targets, and the spatial configuration of the flankers. Specifically, flankers were arranged to induce either crowding or “uncrowding,” through the manipulation of good-Gestalt properties. Our results show that crowding has a temporal integration period of around 170 msec, but this varies substantially across individuals. Importantly, resting-state individual alpha frequency predicted individual variance in temporal integration windows: Individuals with faster endogenous alpha rhythms could begin to segregate targets from distractors at shorter SOAs. Crucially, this effect was specific for crowding-inducing flankers and disappeared when flankers led to uncrowding. These results suggest that top–down spatial grouping can overwrite the temporal integration constraint imposed by alpha oscillations, highlighting both the relevance of alpha for understanding limits on peripheral visual processing and the flexible and context-dependent role of alpha in temporal integration.
Spatial Grouping Modulates the Link between Individual Alpha Frequency and Temporal Integration Windows in Crowding / Santoni, A., Ronconi, L., Samaha, J.. - In: JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 0898-929X. - 2026:(2026), pp. 1-12. [10.1162/JOCN.a.2609]
Spatial Grouping Modulates the Link between Individual Alpha Frequency and Temporal Integration Windows in Crowding
Santoni, Alessia;Ronconi, Luca;
2026-01-01
Abstract
Previous research has linked endogenous alpha oscillations (∼7–13 Hz) to temporal integration windows in visual perception, with higher individual alpha frequency predicting improved temporal segregation. Here, we investigated whether alpha-rhythmic temporal integration is a factor in visual crowding and whether this relationship is mediated by spatial grouping mechanisms. Forty-seven participants performed a Vernier discrimination task, in which we manipulated both the stimulus onset asynchrony between flankers and targets, and the spatial configuration of the flankers. Specifically, flankers were arranged to induce either crowding or “uncrowding,” through the manipulation of good-Gestalt properties. Our results show that crowding has a temporal integration period of around 170 msec, but this varies substantially across individuals. Importantly, resting-state individual alpha frequency predicted individual variance in temporal integration windows: Individuals with faster endogenous alpha rhythms could begin to segregate targets from distractors at shorter SOAs. Crucially, this effect was specific for crowding-inducing flankers and disappeared when flankers led to uncrowding. These results suggest that top–down spatial grouping can overwrite the temporal integration constraint imposed by alpha oscillations, highlighting both the relevance of alpha for understanding limits on peripheral visual processing and the flexible and context-dependent role of alpha in temporal integration.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione



