AI Article Synopsis

  • Assessing unconscious processing relies on accurate measures of conscious perception, but subjective reports and forced-choice discrimination often yield conflicting results.
  • Researchers investigated this issue using masked response priming to compare how invisible primes are processed versus consciously perceived primes.
  • Their findings indicate that while subjects can perform above chance in forced-choice discrimination for unseen stimuli, this performance likely reflects unconscious processing rather than conscious awareness.

Article Abstract

Assessing unconscious processing requires a valid measure of conscious perception. However, the two measures most commonly used, subjective reports and forced-choice discrimination, do not always converge: observers can discriminate stimuli rated as invisible better than chance. A debated issue is whether this phenomenon indicates that subjective reports of unawareness are contaminated by conscious perception, or that forced-choice discrimination performance is contaminated by unconscious processing. To address this question, we took advantage of a previously reported dissociation using masked response priming: for primes rated as invisible on a multi-point scale, response priming occurs only for fast trials, whereas for consciously perceived primes, response priming occurs across response times. Here, we replicated this dissociation, confirming that invisibility-reports were not contaminated by conscious perception. Crucially, we measured prime-discrimination performance within the same experiment and found above-chance performance for unseen primes. Together, these findings suggest that forced-choice discrimination performance is contaminated by unconscious processing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11451544PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/joc.402DOI Listing

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