Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simultaneously presented with conflicting stimuli, perception falls into a sequence of spontaneous alternations, switching between one stimulus and the other every few seconds. Known as binocular rivalry, this visual illusion decouples subjective experience from physical stimulation and provides a unique opportunity to study the neural correlates of consciousness. The temporal properties of this alternating perception have been intensively investigated for decades, yet the relationship between two fundamental properties - the sequence of percepts and the duration of each percept - remains largely unexplored.Here we examine the relationship between the percept s...
Levelt's four propositions (L1-L4), which characterize the relation between changes in "stimulus str...
When different images are presented to the two eyes, they compete for perceptual dominance, such tha...
AbstractWhen the two eyes are presented with sufficiently different stimuli, the stimuli will engage...
Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simultaneously pres...
BACKGROUND:Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simultan...
Background: Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simulta...
Binocular rivalry and stimulus rivalry are two forms of perceptual instability that arise when the v...
When the two eyes are presented with different images, perception cycles through a sequence of domin...
In binocular rivalry, the visual percept alternates stochastically between two dichoptically present...
When discrepant images are shown to the two eyes, each can intermittently disappear. This is known a...
When the two eyes are presented with conflicting stimuli, perception starts to fluctuate over time (...
Binocular rivalry is a form of multistable perception in which visual awareness fluctuates irregular...
Binocular rivalry is a phenomenon of visual perception in which perception alternates between two di...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...
WHEN different images are presented to the two eyes, they compete for perceptual dominance, such tha...
Levelt's four propositions (L1-L4), which characterize the relation between changes in "stimulus str...
When different images are presented to the two eyes, they compete for perceptual dominance, such tha...
AbstractWhen the two eyes are presented with sufficiently different stimuli, the stimuli will engage...
Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simultaneously pres...
BACKGROUND:Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simultan...
Background: Visual perception is usually stable and accurate. However, when the two eyes are simulta...
Binocular rivalry and stimulus rivalry are two forms of perceptual instability that arise when the v...
When the two eyes are presented with different images, perception cycles through a sequence of domin...
In binocular rivalry, the visual percept alternates stochastically between two dichoptically present...
When discrepant images are shown to the two eyes, each can intermittently disappear. This is known a...
When the two eyes are presented with conflicting stimuli, perception starts to fluctuate over time (...
Binocular rivalry is a form of multistable perception in which visual awareness fluctuates irregular...
Binocular rivalry is a phenomenon of visual perception in which perception alternates between two di...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...
WHEN different images are presented to the two eyes, they compete for perceptual dominance, such tha...
Levelt's four propositions (L1-L4), which characterize the relation between changes in "stimulus str...
When different images are presented to the two eyes, they compete for perceptual dominance, such tha...
AbstractWhen the two eyes are presented with sufficiently different stimuli, the stimuli will engage...