14 research outputs found
Electrophysiological activation by masked primes: Independence of prime-related and target-related activities
Visual stimuli that are made invisible by metacontrast masking (primes) have a
marked influence on behavioral and psychophysiological measures such as reaction
time (RT) and the lateralized readiness potential (LRP). 4 experiments are
reported that shed light on the effects that masked primes have on the LRP.
Participants had a go-nogo task in which the prime was associated with 1 of 2
responses even if the target required participants to refrain from responding.
To analyze the electrophysiological responses, we computed the LRP and applied
an averaging method separating the activation due to the prime and the target.
The results demonstrated that (a) masked primes activate responses even in a
nogo situation, (b) this prime-related activation is independent of masking, (c)
and is also independent of whether prime and target require the same responses
(congruent condition) or different responses (incongruent condition)
Sensorimotor supremacy: Investigating conscious and unconscious vision by masked priming
According to the sensorimotor supremacy hypothesis, conscious perception draws on
motor action. In the present report, we will sketch two lines of potential
development in the field of masking research based on the sensorimotor supremacy
hypothesis. In the first part of the report, evidence is reviewed that masked,
invisible stimuli can affect motor responses, attention shifts, and semantic
processes. After the review of the corresponding evidence – so-called masked
priming effects – an approach based on the sensorimotor supremacy hypothesis is
detailed as to how the question of a unitary mechanism of unconscious vision can
be pursued by masked priming studies. In the second part of the report,
different models and theories of backward masking and masked priming are
reviewed. Types of models based on the sensorimotor hypothesis are discussed
that can take into account ways in which sensorimotor processes (reflected in
masked priming effects) can affect conscious vision under backward masking
conditions
Relationships between perception and action: current approaches
Neumann O, Prinz W, Bieri P, eds. Relationships between perception and action: current approaches. Berlin: Springer; 1990
Utilisation of sensory information for motor control
Cruse H, Dean J, Heuer H, Schmidt RA. Utilisation of sensory information for motor control. In: Neumann O, ed. Relationships between perception and action. Berlin [u.a.]: Springer; 1990: 43-79