Can human observers distinguish physical removal of a visible stimulus from phenomenal suppression of that stimulus during binocular rivalry? As so often happens, simple questions produce complex answers, and that is the case in the study reported here. Using continuous flash suppression to produce binocular rivalry, we were able to identify stimulus conditions where most – but not all -- people utterly fail to distinguish physical from phenomenal stimulus removal, although we can be certain that those two equivalent perceptual states are accompanied by distinct neural events. More interestingly, we find subtle variants of the task where distinguishing the two states is trivially easy, even for people who utterly fail under the original con...
When the two eyes are presented with dissimilar images, the brain has to select one percept for awa...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
Binocular rivalry occurs when the two eyes are presented with incompatible stimuli and the perceived...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
<div><p>In interocular suppression, a suprathreshold monocular target can be rendered invisible by a...
In interocular suppression, a suprathreshold monocular target can be rendered invisible by a salient...
ABSTRACT—During binocular-rivalry suppression, an or-dinarily visible stimulus is erased from awaren...
Various paradigms can make visual stimuli disappear from awareness, but they often involve stimuli t...
Contains fulltext : 135884.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Binocular rival...
AbstractBinocular rivalry refers to the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are pre...
Under certain viewing conditions, visual stimuli that are normally highly salient can be rendered in...
& When the same visual input has conflicting interpretations, conscious perception can alternate...
AbstractWhen dissimilar images are presented to the two eyes, the human visual system lapses into bi...
When conflicting images are presented to the corresponding regions of the two eyes, only one image m...
When the two eyes are presented with dissimilar images, the brain has to select one percept for awa...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
Binocular rivalry occurs when the two eyes are presented with incompatible stimuli and the perceived...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
<div><p>In interocular suppression, a suprathreshold monocular target can be rendered invisible by a...
In interocular suppression, a suprathreshold monocular target can be rendered invisible by a salient...
ABSTRACT—During binocular-rivalry suppression, an or-dinarily visible stimulus is erased from awaren...
Various paradigms can make visual stimuli disappear from awareness, but they often involve stimuli t...
Contains fulltext : 135884.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Binocular rival...
AbstractBinocular rivalry refers to the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are pre...
Under certain viewing conditions, visual stimuli that are normally highly salient can be rendered in...
& When the same visual input has conflicting interpretations, conscious perception can alternate...
AbstractWhen dissimilar images are presented to the two eyes, the human visual system lapses into bi...
When conflicting images are presented to the corresponding regions of the two eyes, only one image m...
When the two eyes are presented with dissimilar images, the brain has to select one percept for awa...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
Binocular rivalry occurs when the two eyes are presented with incompatible stimuli and the perceived...