Priming in a shape task but not in a category task under continuous flash suppression
Continuous flash suppression (CFS) is an interocular suppression technique that uses high-contrast masks flashed to one eye to prevent conscious perception of images shown to the other eye. It has become widely used due to its strength and prolonged duration of suppression and its nearly determinist...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of vision (Charlottesville, Va.) Va.), 2016, Vol.16 (3), p.17-17 |
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creator | Hesselmann, Guido Darcy, Natasha Ludwig, Karin Sterzer, Philipp |
description | Continuous flash suppression (CFS) is an interocular suppression technique that uses high-contrast masks flashed to one eye to prevent conscious perception of images shown to the other eye. It has become widely used due to its strength and prolonged duration of suppression and its nearly deterministic control of suppression onset and offset. Recently, it has been proposed that action-relevant visual processing ascribed to the dorsal stream remains functional, while processing in the ventral stream is completely suppressed, when stimuli are invisible under CFS. Here we tested the hypothesis that the potentially dorsal-stream-based analysis of prime-stimulus elongation during CFS affects the categorization of manipulable target objects. In two behavioral experiments, we found evidence for priming in a shape task, but none for priming in a category task, when prime stimuli were rendered invisible using CFS. Our results thus support the notion that the representation of CF-suppressed stimuli is more limited than previously thought. |
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subjects | Adolescent Adult Female Humans Male Pattern Recognition, Visual - physiology Perceptual Masking - physiology Photic Stimulation - methods Retina - radiation effects Visual Pathways - physiology Young Adult |
title | Priming in a shape task but not in a category task under continuous flash suppression |
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