Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functional and neural underpinnings of visual awareness. Here we investigated whether distributed local features can be bound, outside of awareness, into coherent patterns. We used continuous flash suppression (CFS) to create interocular suppression, and thus lack of awareness, for a moving dot stimulus that varied in terms of coherence with an overall pattern (radial flow). Our results demonstrate that for radial motion, coherence favors the detection of patterns of moving dots even under interocular suppression. Coherence caused dots to break through the masks more often: this indicates that the visual system was able to integrate low-level motio...
AbstractWhat specific network of neural activity mediates awareness? In this issue of Neuron, Wilke ...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
Perception and performance is affected not just by what we see but also by what we do not see—inputs...
Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functi...
Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functi...
Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functi...
In the present study we addressed whether the processing of global form and motion was dependent on ...
The relationship between consciousness and other perceptual and cognitive processes can be studied u...
When an array of visual elements is changing color, size, or shape incoherently, the changes are typ...
AbstractThe brain can integrate local motion signals among noise to gain a global perception of visu...
A fundamental question in cognitive neuroscience is how neuronal representations are related to cons...
AbstractWhen several scattered grating elements are arranged in such a way that their directions of ...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a giv...
The scope and limits of unconscious processing are a matter of ongoing debate. Lately, continuous fl...
AbstractWhat specific network of neural activity mediates awareness? In this issue of Neuron, Wilke ...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
Perception and performance is affected not just by what we see but also by what we do not see—inputs...
Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functi...
Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functi...
Research on the scope and limits of non-conscious vision can advance our understanding of the functi...
In the present study we addressed whether the processing of global form and motion was dependent on ...
The relationship between consciousness and other perceptual and cognitive processes can be studied u...
When an array of visual elements is changing color, size, or shape incoherently, the changes are typ...
AbstractThe brain can integrate local motion signals among noise to gain a global perception of visu...
A fundamental question in cognitive neuroscience is how neuronal representations are related to cons...
AbstractWhen several scattered grating elements are arranged in such a way that their directions of ...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a giv...
The scope and limits of unconscious processing are a matter of ongoing debate. Lately, continuous fl...
AbstractWhat specific network of neural activity mediates awareness? In this issue of Neuron, Wilke ...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
Perception and performance is affected not just by what we see but also by what we do not see—inputs...