期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
High level binocular rivalry effects
Michal eWolf1  Shaul eHochstein1 
[1] Hebrew University of Jerusalem;
关键词: Consciousness;    Perception;    semantics;    Binocular Rivalry;    binocular;    cortical level;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fnhum.2011.00129
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Binocular rivalry (BR) occurs when the brain cannot fuse percepts from the two eyes because they are different. We review results relating to an ongoing controversy regarding the cortical site of the BR mechanism. Some BR qualities suggest it is low-level: 1) BR, as its name implies, is usually between eyes and only low levels have access to utrocular information. 2) All input to one eye is suppressed: blurring doesn’t stimulate accommodation; pupilary constrictions are reduced; probe detection is reduced. 3) Rivalry is affected by low level attributes, contrast, spatial frequency, brightness, motion. 4) There is limited priming due to suppressed words or pictures. On the other hand, recent studies favor a high level mechanism: 1) Rivalry occurs between patterns, not eyes, as in patchwork rivalry or a swapping paradigm. 2) Attention affects alternations. 3) Context affects dominance. There is conflicting evidence from physiological studies (single cell and fMRI) regarding cortical level(s) of conscious perception. We discuss the possibility of multiple BR sites and theoretical considerations that rule out this solution.We present new data regarding the locus of the BR switch by manipulating stimulus semantic content or high-level characteristics. Since these variations are represented at higher cortical levels, their affecting rivalry supports high-level BR intervention. In Experiment I, we measure rivalry when one eye views words and the other nonwords and find significantly longer dominance durations for nonwords. In Experiment II, we find longer dominance times for line drawings of simple, structurally impossible figures than for similar, possible objects. In Experiment III, we test the influence of idiomatic context on rivalry between words. Results show that generally words within their idiomatic context have longer mean dominance durations. We conclude that Binocular Rivalry has high-level cortical influences, and may be controlled by a high-level mechanism.

【 授权许可】

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