binocular rivalry suppressionshort-range motionrandom-dot cinematogramrival targetkeypressdominancesuppression/ A8732S Psychophysics of vision, visual perception, binocular visionFor short-range motion, observer
binocular rivalry as an experimental tool to dissociate the input to visual processing (physical stimuli) from its output (conscious perception), it must be noted that despite a long and rich history of binocular rivalry research, the actual mechanisms that give rise to the phenomenon are still ...
Binocular rivalry is a common laboratory paradigm for investigating how the brain integrates information from our two eyes. During normal visual perception, our eyes receive roughly the same image on each of the two retina. The brain takes advantage of this redundancy to make sense of what is ob...
During rivalry, a moving pattern was visible for about 50% longer than an equivalently oriented static pattern (Experi- ments 1, 2, and 4). When both gratings were in motion (Experiments 3 and 5), the course of rivalry was similar to that found for two static gratings. The duration of...
Reprints and permissions About this article Cite this article Blake, R. Binocular rivalry and perceptual inference. Perception & Psychophysics 29, 77–78 (1981). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03198843 Download citation Received08 October 1980 Accepted15 October 1980 Issue DateJanuary 1981 DOIhttps://do...
The study of binocular rivalry, as well as other forms of multi-stable perception, bears importantly on a number of key issues in vision science: perceptual organization, dynamical systems, visual awareness, attention and, possibly, neural bases of strabismic suppression (a developmentally-based ...
in binocular rivalry Marnix Naber✉, Sjoerd Stuit,Yentl De Kloe, Stefan Van der Stigchel & Chris L. E. Paffen When one eye is presented with an image that is distinct from the image presented to the other eye, the eyes start to rival and suppress each other's image...
Binocular motion rivalry in macaque monkeys: Eye dominance and tracking eye movements When the two eyes are exposed to markedly different patterns, perception becomes unstable, falling into oscillations, so that the image of one eye is seen ... NK Logothetis,JD Schall - 《Vision Research》 被引...
Using binocular rivalry as a proxy index, we found that composite perception of dichoptic arrays was more stable when the stimulus items shared similar colours, and that unusual ensembles induced binocular rivalry. Our results suggest that binocular ensembles can be utilized to detect unsuccessful ...
The results, which apply to both form and motion judgements, show that the sensitivity loss during suppression increases as the subject’s task becomes more sophisticated. We conclude that binocular rivalry suppression is present at a number of stages along two visual cortical pathways, and that ...