If the two eyes' conflicting features are invisible, leading to identical perceptual interpretations, does rivalry competition still occur? Here we investigated whether binocular rivalry can be induced from conflicting but invisible spatial patterns. A chromatic grating counterphase flic...
In binocular rivalry the time during which different stimuli are perceived depends—amongst other things—on their spatial frequency (sf) contents, on cont... M Fahle - 《Vision Research》 被引量: 196发表: 1982年 From the Cover: Binocular rivalry from invisible patterns Binocular rivalry arises ...
This mild sensitivity loss is difficult to reconcile with the total perceptual loss, whereby all trace of the suppressed stimulus disappears: a typical rivalry-inducing stimulus would have to be reduced in contrast by a factor much greater than two to render it invisible during non-rivalrous ...
6a). This pattern of results makes sense if the dissimilar colour and the combined colour conditions engender binocular rivalry and, therefore, introduce the likelihood of one probe being rendered invisible by its being imaged within a region of suppression. Figure 6 Detection rates of the one-...
In binocular combination, light images on the two retinas are combined to form a single “cyclopean” perceptual image, in contrast to binocular rivalry which occurs when the two eyes have incompatible (“rivalrous”) inputs and only one eye`s stimulus is perceived. We propose a computational ...
Blake R (1977) Threshold conditions for binocular rivalry. J Exp Psychol 3:251–257. Google Scholar Blake R and Fox R (1974) Adaptation to invisible gratings and the site of binocular rivalry suppression. Nature 249:488–490 Google Scholar Breese BB (1909) Binocular rivalry. Psychol Rev ...
(2009). Seeing the invisible: the scope and limits of uncon- scious processing in binocular rivalry. Prog. Neurobiol. 87, 195-211. doi: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2008.09.002Zhicheng Lin,Sheng He.Seeing the invisible: The scope and limits of unconscious processing in binocular rivalry[J]. Progress...
(2009). Seeing the invisible: The scope and limits of unconscious processing in binocular rivalry. Progress in Neurobiology, 87, 195-211.Lin Z and He S. Seeing the invisible: the scope and limits of unconscious processing in binocular rivalry. Progress in Neurobiology, 87(4): 195-211, 2009...
(1974). Adaptation to invisible gratings and the site of binocular rivalry suppression. Nature 249, 488-490.Blake, R. & Fox, R. (1974). Adaptation to invisible gratings and the site of binocular rivalry suppression. Nature 249, 488-490....