Affiliation:
1. 1Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2. 2Harvard University
Abstract
Abstract
Visual perception and awareness have strict limitations. We suggest that one source of these limitations is the representational architecture of the visual system. Under this view, the extent to which items activate the same neural channels constrains the amount of information that can be processed by the visual system and ultimately reach awareness. Here, we measured how well stimuli from different categories (e.g., faces and cars) blocked one another from reaching awareness using two distinct paradigms that render stimuli invisible: visual masking and continuous flash suppression. Next, we used fMRI to measure the similarity of the neural responses elicited by these categories across the entire visual hierarchy. Overall, we found strong brain–behavior correlations within the ventral pathway, weaker correlations in the dorsal pathway, and no correlations in early visual cortex (V1–V3). These results suggest that the organization of higher level visual cortex constrains visual awareness and the overall processing capacity of visual cognition.
Reference66 articles.
1. The role of the dorsal visual processing stream in tool identification.;Almeida;Psychological Science,2010
2. Unconscious processing dissociates along categorical lines;Almeida;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A.,2008
3. Affect of the unconscious: Visually suppressed angry faces modulate our decisions;Almeida;Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience,2013
4. Do multielement visual tracking and visual search draw continuously on the same visual attention resources?;Alvarez;Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance,2005
5. The neural correlates of crowding-induced changes in appearance;Anderson;Current Biology,2012
Cited by
32 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献