Physical effort modulates perceptual awareness judgment independent of level of processing
•Color and category judgment tasks are stable and effective tools for distinguishing the emergence of awareness between low and high processing levels.•Individuals tended to report higher visual awareness ratings when they were requested to expend greater physical effort to complete a discrimination...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Consciousness and cognition 2024-09, Vol.124, p.103746, Article 103746 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Color and category judgment tasks are stable and effective tools for distinguishing the emergence of awareness between low and high processing levels.•Individuals tended to report higher visual awareness ratings when they were requested to expend greater physical effort to complete a discrimination response.•Action-related information influence perceptual awareness judgment about the target stimulus independently of the levels of processing.
Recent studies have emphasized the association between action and perceptual awareness, suggesting that action-related information can contribute to perceptual awareness. Given that the Level of Processing (LoP) hypothesis proposes that the emergence of awareness depends on the level of stimulus processing, the current study examines whether action impacts perceptual awareness across different processing levels. In Experiment 1, participants identified target stimuli’s color (low-level task) or category (high-level task) via mouse clicks, followed by visual awareness ratings. Experiment 2 replicated the tasks using hand-grip dynamometers. Results from Experiment 1 support the LoP theory, showing a more gradual emergence of awareness for low-level features and a more dichotomous emergence for high-level features. In Experiment 2, higher reported visual awareness ratings were observed at greater physical effort, regardless of task type. These results suggest that action-related information influences reported awareness of stimuli in the same way at low- and high-level stimulus processing. |
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ISSN: | 1053-8100 1090-2376 1090-2376 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.concog.2024.103746 |