Journal article
Onset rivalry: Brief presentation isolates an early independent phase of perceptual competition
O Carter, P Cavanagh
Plos One | Published : 2007
Abstract
When the left and right eyes are simultaneously presented with different images, observers typically report exclusive awareness of only one image. This phenomenon is termed binocular rivalry, reflecting the fact that the dominant image alternates every few seconds in a cycle of perceptual competition that continues indefinitely. Despite the apparent continuity in perceptual switching, we now demonstrate that the initial "onset" period is fundamentally different to all subsequent rivalry epochs. Using brief intermittent presentations, rivalry dominance shows strong biases such that the same target is perceived with each successive stimulus onset. These biases remain consistent within any give..
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Grants
Awarded by National Eye Institute
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a NHMRC(Aust) CJ Martin Fellowship: 368525 to OC and a NIH grant: R01 EY-09258 to PC.