
Consciousness and Cognition, Год журнала: 2025, Номер 129, С. 103830 - 103830
Опубликована: Фев. 19, 2025
Breaking continuous flash suppression (bCFS) is a widely used experimental paradigm that exploits detection tasks to measure the time an invisible stimulus requires access awareness. Oneunresolved issue whether differences in times reflect unconscious or conscious processing. To answer this question, here we introduce novel approach (reverse-bCFS [rev-bCFS]) measures initially visible be suppressed from Results two experiments using face stimuli indicate rev-bCFS can capture effects, which indicates contrasting standard bCFS with isolate processing occurring specifically during bCFS. For example, while inversion impacted both and rev-bCFS, effects were larger bCFS, suggesting distinct contribution of advantage upright over inverted faces accessing Combining may offer fruitful disentangle interocular suppression.
Язык: Английский