Getting to the heart of it: Multi-method exploration of nonconscious prioritization processes
•The CFS paradigm has a near monopoly on measuring prioritization for consciousness.•RMS is a new long duration suppression paradigm based on different visual principles.•RMS can be run online, extending the study of consciousness to diverse populations.•Multi-method experiments uncover a central ge...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Consciousness and cognition 2020-10, Vol.85, p.103005-103005, Article 103005 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •The CFS paradigm has a near monopoly on measuring prioritization for consciousness.•RMS is a new long duration suppression paradigm based on different visual principles.•RMS can be run online, extending the study of consciousness to diverse populations.•Multi-method experiments uncover a central general prioritization process.•The face inversion effect and priority-dimension are similar across paradigms.
Understanding the determinants of consciousness is crucial for theories that see it as functionally adaptive, and for explaining how consciousness affects higher-level cognition. The invention of continuous flash suppression (CFS), a long-duration suppression technique, resulted in a proliferation of research into the process of prioritization for consciousness. We developed a new technique, repeated masked suppression (RMS), that facilitates the measurement of long suppression times, but relies on different visual principles. RMS enables a theoretical leap: It allows scientists to examine the central process of prioritization across different suppression methods. In five experiments (n = 282) we collected chronometric RMS and CFS data, finding that the previously reported face inversion effect and the face priority-dimension generalize beyond CFS. Our results validate the use of multi-method designs in the study of prioritization for consciousness. Furthermore, we show how RMS could be used online to reach diverse samples, previously beyond the reach of consciousness science. |
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ISSN: | 1053-8100 1090-2376 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.concog.2020.103005 |