Sustained perceptual invisibility of solid shapes following contour adaptation to partial outlines

•Contour adaptation (CA) can be used to render monochrome shapes perceptually invisible.•The duration of CA-induced perceptual invisibility varies monotonically with length of adaption time.•Adapting only a portion of a shape’s outline is sufficient to produce reliable contour adaption.•CA is invari...

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Veröffentlicht in:Consciousness and cognition 2014-05, Vol.26, p.37-50
Hauptverfasser: Cox, M.A., Lowe, K.A., Blake, R., Maier, A.
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container_title Consciousness and cognition
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creator Cox, M.A.
Lowe, K.A.
Blake, R.
Maier, A.
description •Contour adaptation (CA) can be used to render monochrome shapes perceptually invisible.•The duration of CA-induced perceptual invisibility varies monotonically with length of adaption time.•Adapting only a portion of a shape’s outline is sufficient to produce reliable contour adaption.•CA is invariant to higher-level visual features such as the specific shape of a figure. Contour adaptation (CA) is a recently described paradigm that renders otherwise salient visual stimuli temporarily perceptually invisible. Here we investigate whether this illusion can be exploited to study visual awareness. We found that CA can induce seconds of sustained invisibility following similarly long periods of uninterrupted adaptation. Furthermore, even fragmented adaptors are capable of producing CA, with the strength of CA increasing monotonically as the adaptors encompass a greater fraction of the stimulus outline. However, different types of adaptor patterns, such as distinctive shapes or illusory contours, produce equivalent levels of CA suggesting that the main determinants of CA are low-level stimulus characteristics, with minimal modulation by higher-order visual processes. Taken together, our results indicate that CA has desirable properties for studying visual awareness, including the production of prolonged periods of perceptual dissociation from stimulation as well as parametric dependencies of that dissociation on a host of stimulus parameters.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.concog.2014.02.007
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source MEDLINE; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Adult
Awareness - physiology
Biological and medical sciences
Consciousness
Contrast Sensitivity - physiology
Eyes & eyesight
Female
Form Perception - physiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gestalt grouping
Humans
Information processing
Male
Optical Illusions - physiology
Perception
Perceptual organization
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Sensory perception
Vision
Visual awareness
Visual illusion
title Sustained perceptual invisibility of solid shapes following contour adaptation to partial outlines
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