veeringluses
Veeringluses is a term in cognitive psychology describing a class of perceptual alternations in which an observer's interpretation of an ambiguous stimulus shifts between competing representations. The phenomenon resembles bistable perception in that the sensory input remains constant while perceptual interpretation changes over time. Veeringluses are distinguished by relatively rapid alternations and by the influence of higher-level factors such as attention, expectations, and recent priming on which interpretation is favored.
Description and measurements: Researchers study veeringluses using bistable images (e.g., ambiguous figures) and auditory sequences. Key
Mechanistic accounts typically involve competition between neural populations coding alternative interpretations, adaptation effects, and top-down modulation.
Origin and usage: The term veeringluses appears in theoretical discussions in the 2010s as a descriptive label
Implications: Veeringluses offer insights into cognitive flexibility, subjective experience, and the design of interfaces that accommodate