SummaryDuring binocular rivalry, conflicting monocular images undergo alternating suppression. This study explores rivalry suppression by probing visual sensitivity during rivalry with various probe stimuli. When two faces engage in rivalry, sensitivity to face probes is reduced 4-fold during suppression. Rivaling global motions also rivaled very deeply when probed with a global motion. However, in a surprising finding, sensitivity to face probes is completely unimpaired during global motion rivalry, and motion sensitivity is unimpaired during face rivalry. This suggests that rivalry suppression is localized to the neurons representing the image conflict, which means that probes of a different kind suffer no suppression. Sensibly, this woul...
AbstractFor over 100 years, binocular rivalry was seen as the result of competition between the two ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are presented ...
During binocular rivalry, one stimulus is visible (dominant), while the other stimulus is invisible ...
SummaryDuring binocular rivalry, conflicting monocular images undergo alternating suppression. This ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry refers to the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are pre...
AbstractPresenting incompatible images to the eyes results in alternations of conscious perception, ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is thought to arise from a low-level cortical site. Experiment 1 evaluates...
AbstractBinocular rivalry has been used to investigate neural correlates of visual awareness. For th...
AbstractThere is an ongoing debate on whether binocular rivalry involves competition among monocular...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...
AbstractWhen dissimilar stimuli are presented to each eye, perception alternates between both images...
AbstractBinocular rivalry occurs when different images are presented one to each eye: the images are...
AbstractIn the past decade, effects of pattern coherence have indicated that perception during binoc...
During binocular rivalry, perception alternates between two different images presented one to each e...
When the two eyes are presented with conflicting stimuli, perception starts to fluctuate over time (...
AbstractFor over 100 years, binocular rivalry was seen as the result of competition between the two ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are presented ...
During binocular rivalry, one stimulus is visible (dominant), while the other stimulus is invisible ...
SummaryDuring binocular rivalry, conflicting monocular images undergo alternating suppression. This ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry refers to the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are pre...
AbstractPresenting incompatible images to the eyes results in alternations of conscious perception, ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is thought to arise from a low-level cortical site. Experiment 1 evaluates...
AbstractBinocular rivalry has been used to investigate neural correlates of visual awareness. For th...
AbstractThere is an ongoing debate on whether binocular rivalry involves competition among monocular...
Binocular rivalry is scientifically attractive because it allows the study of an entirely subjective...
AbstractWhen dissimilar stimuli are presented to each eye, perception alternates between both images...
AbstractBinocular rivalry occurs when different images are presented one to each eye: the images are...
AbstractIn the past decade, effects of pattern coherence have indicated that perception during binoc...
During binocular rivalry, perception alternates between two different images presented one to each e...
When the two eyes are presented with conflicting stimuli, perception starts to fluctuate over time (...
AbstractFor over 100 years, binocular rivalry was seen as the result of competition between the two ...
AbstractBinocular rivalry is the alternating perception that occurs when the two eyes are presented ...
During binocular rivalry, one stimulus is visible (dominant), while the other stimulus is invisible ...