Title of article
Unconscious vision and executive control: How unconscious processing and conscious action control interact
Author/Authors
Ansorge، نويسنده , , Ulrich and Kunde، نويسنده , , Wilfried and Kiefer، نويسنده , , Markus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
20
From page
268
To page
287
Abstract
Research on unconscious or unaware vision has demonstrated that unconscious processing can be flexibly adapted to the current goals of human agents. The present review focuses on one area of research, masked visual priming. This method uses visual stimuli presented in a temporal sequence to lower the visibility of one of these stimuli. In this way, a stimulus can be masked and even rendered invisible. Despite its invisibility, a masked stimulus if used as a prime can influence a variety of executive functions, such as response activation, semantic processing, or attention shifting. There are also limitations on the processing of masked primes. While masked priming research demonstrates the top-down dependent usage of unconscious vision during task-set execution it also highlights that the set-up of a new task-set depends on conscious vision as its input. This basic distinction captures a major qualitative difference between conscious and unconscious vision.
Keywords
executive functions , Subliminal priming , Masked priming
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Record number
2292802
Link To Document