AbstractOrthogonal drifting gratings were presented binocularly to alert macaque monkeys in an attempt to find neural correlates of binocular rivalry. Gratings were centered over lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) receptive fields and the corresponding points for the opposite eye. The only task of the monkey was to fixate. We found no difference between the responses of LGN neurons under rivalrous and nonrivalrous conditions, as determined by examining the ratios of their respective power spectra. There was, however, a curious “temporal afterimage” effect in which cell responses continued to be modulated at the drift frequency of the grating for several seconds after the grating disappeared
The lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) is the principal recipient of signals from the retina and is th...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is thought to arise from a low-level cortical site. Experiment 1 evaluates...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...
AbstractOrthogonal drifting gratings were presented binocularly to alert macaque monkeys in an attem...
AbstractIn an attempt to demonstrate a physiological basis for the alternating suppression of percep...
Throughout the brain, parallel processing streams compose the building blocks of complex neural func...
When the two eyes are exposed to markedly different patterns, perception becomes unstable, falling i...
Binocular rivalry refers to the alternating perceptions experienced when two dissimilar patterns are...
WHEN the two eyes view dissimilar images, we experience binocular rivalry, in which one eye's view d...
Figures that can be seen in more than one way are invaluable tools for the study of the neural basis...
When dissimilar images are presented to the two eyes, perception starts alternating spontaneously be...
When dissimilar images are presented to the two eyes, perception starts alternating spontaneously be...
SummaryIn addition to the classical, center/surround receptive field of neurons in the lateral genic...
Visual stimulation of zones extending beyond the classical receptive field can modulate the contrast...
When humans or monkeys are stereoscopically shown a pair of dissimilar images they experience a sequ...
The lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) is the principal recipient of signals from the retina and is th...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is thought to arise from a low-level cortical site. Experiment 1 evaluates...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...
AbstractOrthogonal drifting gratings were presented binocularly to alert macaque monkeys in an attem...
AbstractIn an attempt to demonstrate a physiological basis for the alternating suppression of percep...
Throughout the brain, parallel processing streams compose the building blocks of complex neural func...
When the two eyes are exposed to markedly different patterns, perception becomes unstable, falling i...
Binocular rivalry refers to the alternating perceptions experienced when two dissimilar patterns are...
WHEN the two eyes view dissimilar images, we experience binocular rivalry, in which one eye's view d...
Figures that can be seen in more than one way are invaluable tools for the study of the neural basis...
When dissimilar images are presented to the two eyes, perception starts alternating spontaneously be...
When dissimilar images are presented to the two eyes, perception starts alternating spontaneously be...
SummaryIn addition to the classical, center/surround receptive field of neurons in the lateral genic...
Visual stimulation of zones extending beyond the classical receptive field can modulate the contrast...
When humans or monkeys are stereoscopically shown a pair of dissimilar images they experience a sequ...
The lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) is the principal recipient of signals from the retina and is th...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is thought to arise from a low-level cortical site. Experiment 1 evaluates...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...