Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict

During perceptual rivalry, an observer's perceptual experience alternates over time despite constant sensory stimulation. Perceptual alternations are thought to be driven by conflicting or ambiguous retinal image features at a particular spatial location and modulated by global context from sur...

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Main Authors: Chen, Zhimin, Maus, Gerrit W., Whitney, David, Denison, Rachel N.
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142826
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1428262020-07-03T03:13:41Z Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict Chen, Zhimin Maus, Gerrit W. Whitney, David Denison, Rachel N. School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Filling-in Blind Spot During perceptual rivalry, an observer's perceptual experience alternates over time despite constant sensory stimulation. Perceptual alternations are thought to be driven by conflicting or ambiguous retinal image features at a particular spatial location and modulated by global context from surrounding locations. However, rivalry can also occur between two illusory stimuli-such as two filled-in stimuli within the retinal blind spot. In this "filling-in rivalry," what observers perceive in the blind spot changes in the absence of local stimulation. It remains unclear if filling-in rivalry shares common mechanisms with other types of rivalry. We measured the dynamics of rivalry between filled-in percepts in the blind spot, finding a high degree of exclusivity (perceptual dominance of one filled-in percept, rather than a perception of transparency), alternation rates that were highly consistent for individual observers, and dynamics that closely resembled other forms of perceptual rivalry. The results suggest that mechanisms common to a wide range of rivalry situations need not rely on conflicting retinal image signals. Published version 2020-07-03T03:13:40Z 2020-07-03T03:13:40Z 2017 Journal Article Chen, Z., Maus, G. W., Whitney, D., & Denison, R. N. (2017). Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict. Journal of Vision, 17(1), 8-. doi:10.1167/17.1.8 1534-7362 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142826 10.1167/17.1.8 28114480 2-s2.0-85010333094 1 17 en Journal of Vision © 2017 The Author(s) (published by Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Filling-in
Blind Spot
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Filling-in
Blind Spot
Chen, Zhimin
Maus, Gerrit W.
Whitney, David
Denison, Rachel N.
Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
description During perceptual rivalry, an observer's perceptual experience alternates over time despite constant sensory stimulation. Perceptual alternations are thought to be driven by conflicting or ambiguous retinal image features at a particular spatial location and modulated by global context from surrounding locations. However, rivalry can also occur between two illusory stimuli-such as two filled-in stimuli within the retinal blind spot. In this "filling-in rivalry," what observers perceive in the blind spot changes in the absence of local stimulation. It remains unclear if filling-in rivalry shares common mechanisms with other types of rivalry. We measured the dynamics of rivalry between filled-in percepts in the blind spot, finding a high degree of exclusivity (perceptual dominance of one filled-in percept, rather than a perception of transparency), alternation rates that were highly consistent for individual observers, and dynamics that closely resembled other forms of perceptual rivalry. The results suggest that mechanisms common to a wide range of rivalry situations need not rely on conflicting retinal image signals.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Chen, Zhimin
Maus, Gerrit W.
Whitney, David
Denison, Rachel N.
format Article
author Chen, Zhimin
Maus, Gerrit W.
Whitney, David
Denison, Rachel N.
author_sort Chen, Zhimin
title Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
title_short Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
title_full Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
title_fullStr Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
title_full_unstemmed Filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
title_sort filling-in rivalry : perceptual alternations in the absence of retinal image conflict
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142826
_version_ 1681058495140462592