The scope and limits of unconscious processing are a matter of ongoing debate. Lately, continuous flash suppression (CFS), a technique for suppressing visual stimuli, has been widely used to demonstrate surprisingly high-level processing of invisible stimuli. Yet, recent studies showed that CFS might actually allow low-level features of the stimulus to escape suppression and be consciously perceived. The influence of such low-level awareness on high-level processing might easily go unnoticed, as studies usually only probe the visibility of the feature of interest, and not that of lower-level features. For instance, face identity is held to be processed unconsciously since subjects who fail to judge the identity of suppressed faces still sho...
The study of non-conscious vision benefits from several alternative methods that allow the suppressi...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) has been used as a paradigm to probe the extent to which word sti...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
The scope and limits of unconscious processing are a matter of ongoing debate. Lately, continuous fl...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
To what level are invisible stimuli processed by the brain in the absence of conscious awareness? Ta...
Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a giv...
Traditionally, interocular suppression is believed to disrupt high-level (i.e., semantic or conceptu...
Traditionally, interocular suppression is believed to disrupt high-level (i.e., semantic or conceptu...
The interocular suppression technique termed continuous flash suppression (CFS) has become an immens...
Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a giv...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) is an interocular suppression technique that uses high-contrast m...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) has been used as a paradigm to probe the extent to which word sti...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
AbstractInvestigating the limits of unconscious processing is essential to understand the function o...
The study of non-conscious vision benefits from several alternative methods that allow the suppressi...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) has been used as a paradigm to probe the extent to which word sti...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...
The scope and limits of unconscious processing are a matter of ongoing debate. Lately, continuous fl...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
To what level are invisible stimuli processed by the brain in the absence of conscious awareness? Ta...
Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a giv...
Traditionally, interocular suppression is believed to disrupt high-level (i.e., semantic or conceptu...
Traditionally, interocular suppression is believed to disrupt high-level (i.e., semantic or conceptu...
The interocular suppression technique termed continuous flash suppression (CFS) has become an immens...
Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a giv...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) is an interocular suppression technique that uses high-contrast m...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) has been used as a paradigm to probe the extent to which word sti...
Until recently, it has been thought that under interocular suppression high-level visual processing ...
AbstractInvestigating the limits of unconscious processing is essential to understand the function o...
The study of non-conscious vision benefits from several alternative methods that allow the suppressi...
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) has been used as a paradigm to probe the extent to which word sti...
When dissimilar stimuli are presented to the two eyes, only one stimulus dominates at a time while t...