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Continuous flash suppression (CFS) can reveal unconscious visual processing. Even when stimuli are not consciously perceived, CFS allows for response priming, demonstrating that masking does not fully block unconscious shape processing.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Visual Perception
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Continuous flash suppression (CFS) is widely used to investigate unconscious visual processing.
  • The precise depth of unconscious processing under CFS remains unclear.
  • Response priming, where a prime facilitates target responses, is a known phenomenon.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate unconscious response priming of shape using CFS.
  • To determine if CFS completely suppresses unconscious visual processing.
  • To dissociate conscious and unconscious processing levels under CFS.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized CFS to present arrow primes (left/right orientation) near the threshold of consciousness.
  • Measured subjective visibility ratings and forced-choice orientation discrimination.
  • Analyzed response priming effects in both reported conscious and unconscious trials.

Main Results:

  • Priming occurred even in trials where primes were not consciously perceived (chance-level discrimination).
  • Unconscious priming was unaffected by stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) or prime duration.
  • Conscious processing, indicated by improved discrimination and priming, increased with longer SOAs/durations.

Conclusions:

  • Conscious and unconscious processing can be dissociated using CFS.
  • CFS masking does not entirely eliminate unconscious visual processing of shape.
  • Unconscious processing exhibits different dynamics compared to conscious processing under CFS.