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Form constant

A form constant is one of several geometric patternswhich are recurringly observed by different people during hallucinatory states.

Image:Collectivevision.jpg

In 1926, Heinrich Klüversystematically studied the effects of mescaline(peyote) on the subjective experiencesof its users. In addition to producing potent hallucinationscharacterized by bright, 'highly saturated' colors and vivid imagery, Klüver noticed that mescaline produced recurring geometric patterns in different users. He called these patterns 'form constants' and categorized four types: lattices(including honeycombs, checkerboards, and triangles), cobwebs, tunnels, and spirals.

Klüver's form constants have appeared in other drug-induced and naturally-occurring hallucinations, suggesting a similar physiological process underlying hallucinations with different triggers. Klüver's form constants also appear in near-death experiencesand hallucinations of those with synesthesia. Other triggers include psychological stress, or threshold consciousness, including falling asleep, waking up, insulin hypoglycemia, the delirium of fever, epilepsy, psychotic episodes, advanced syphilis, sensory deprivation, photostimulation, electrical stimulation, crystal gazing, migraine headaches, dizzinessand a variety of drug intoxications.

The diversity of conditions that provoke such patterns suggests that form constants reflect some fundamental property of the visual system.

See also

  • Tessellation
  • Moiré pattern

References

  1. Blackmore, Susan. Dying to Live: Near-Death Experiences. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1993.
  2. Bressloff, Paul C., Jack D. Cowan, Martin Golubitsky, Peter J. Thomas, and Matthew C. Wiener. "What Geometric Visual Hallucinations Tell Us About the Visual Cortex." Neural Computation. Vol. 14, No. 3 (March 2002): 473-491.
  3. Cytowic, Richard E., The Man Who Tasted Shapes.
  4. Ermentrout,G.B. and Cowan, J.D., "A mathematical theory of visual hallucination patterns." Biol. Cybernet. 34 (1979), no. 3, 137-150.
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Form+constant Wikipedia article Form constant.

 
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