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Continuous flash suppression and monocular pattern masking impact subjective awareness similarly
Authors:J D Knotts  Hakwan Lau  Megan A K Peters
Institution:1.Department of Psychology,University of California Los Angeles,Los Angeles,USA;2.Brain Research Institute,University of California Los Angeles,Los Angeles,USA;3.Department of Psychology,University of Hong Kong,Pokfulam,Hong Kong;4.Department of Bioengineering,University of California Riverside,Riverside,USA;5.Interdepartmental Graduate Program in Neuroscience,University of California Riverside,Riverside,USA
Abstract:Peters and Lau (eLife, 4, e09651, 2015) found that when criterion bias is controlled for, there is no evidence for unconscious visual perception in normal observers, in the sense that they cannot directly discriminate a target above chance without knowing it. One criticism of that study is that the visual suppression method used, forward and backward masking (FBM), may be too blunt in the way it interferes with visual processing to allow for unconscious forced-choice discrimination. To investigate this question, we compared FBM directly to continuous flash suppression (CFS) in a two-interval forced-choice task. Although CFS is popular, and may be thought of as a more powerful visual suppression technique, we found no difference in the degree of perceptual impairment between the two suppression types. To the extent that CFS impairs perception, both objective discrimination and subjective awareness are impaired to similar degrees under FBM. This pattern was consistently observed across three experiments in which various experimental parameters were varied. These findings provide evidence for an ongoing debate about unconscious perception: normal observers cannot perform forced-choice discrimination tasks unconsciously.
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