Visually guided attention is neutralized when informative cues are visible but unperceived
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Cited by (29)
Psychophysical "blinding" methods reveal a functional hierarchy of unconscious visual processing
2015, Consciousness and CognitionCitation Excerpt :If so, then concurring with Watanabe (2005) the visibility of the illusion-inducing stimulus would not be a necessary condition. Similar conclusions and cautions characterize Cave et al.’s (1998) assessment of binocular-rivalry suppressive effects on picture priming and Schall, Nawrot, Blake, and Yu’s (1993) of these effects on attentional cuing (see also, Blake, 1998). Regarding priming, Cave et al. (1998) and Zimba and Blake (1983) found that semantic priming did not occur when the visibility of picture or word primes were suppressed during binocular rivalry (but see Costello, Jiang, Baartman, McGlennen, and He (2009) for findings of semantic processing of binocularly suppressed words5), and Schall et al. (1993) found that binocular-rivalry suppressed stimuli could not serve as cues for directing spatial attention (but, again, see Jiang, Costello, Fang, Huan, and He (2006) for contrary findings6).
To see or not to see - thalamo-cortical networks during blindsight and perceptual suppression
2015, Progress in NeurobiologyCitation Excerpt :However, these findings remain disputed (Sakuraba et al., 2012). A related study argued that neuronal responses to perceptually suppressed stimuli can form lasting memories, as subjects respond faster to visual objects that they previously encountered as perceptual suppressed (Chou and Yeh, 2012) (but see, Schall et al., 1993). However, as with blindsight, the preserved visual capacities in the absence of awareness are limited.
The function of consciousness in multisensory integration
2012, CognitionCitation Excerpt :However, given the uninformativeness of these suppressed picture cues, it remains unclear as to whether Ss can learn to guide their attention on the basis of probabilistic relationships between suppressed stimuli and upcoming targets. In what is, to our knowledge, the only other study testing for informative unconscious cueing, Schall, Nawrot, Blake, and Yu (1993) presented participants with trials in which a brief stimulus onset occurred within the left or right side of a striped circle. Eighty percent of the time, a subsequent target appeared at the corresponding side of an outlying region beyond the circle (valid condition), and on the remaining trials it appeared at the opposite side (invalid condition).
Seeing the invisible: The scope and limits of unconscious processing in binocular rivalry
2009, Progress in NeurobiologyMountains and valleys: Binocular rivalry and the flow of experience
2007, Consciousness and CognitionUnconscious Orientation Processing
2004, Neuron