Journal article

Onset rivalry: The initial dominance phase is independent of ongoing perceptual alternations

J Stanley, JD Forte, P Cavanagh, O Carter

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | Published : 2011

Abstract

Binocular rivalry has been used to study a wide range of visual processes, from the integration of low-level features to the selection of signals that reach awareness. However, many of these studies do not distinguish between early and late phases of rivalry. There is clear evidence that the "onset" stage of rivalry is characterized by stable, yet idiosyncratic biases that are not evident in the average dominance of sustained rivalry viewing. Low-level stimulus features also have robust effects in the onset phase that are not seen in sustained rivalry, suggesting these phases may be driven at least partly by different neural mechanisms. The effects of high-level cognitive and affective facto..

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University of Melbourne Researchers