| Literature DB >> 27225219 |
Pieter Moors1, David Boelens2, Jaana van Overwalle2, Johan Wagemans2.
Abstract
A recent study showed that scenes with an object-background relationship that is semantically incongruent break interocular suppression faster than scenes with a semantically congruent relationship. These results implied that semantic relations between the objects and the background of a scene could be extracted in the absence of visual awareness of the stimulus. In the current study, we assessed the replicability of this finding and tried to rule out an alternative explanation dependent on low-level differences between the stimuli. Furthermore, we used a Bayesian analysis to quantify the evidence in favor of the presence or absence of a scene-congruency effect. Across three experiments, we found no convincing evidence for a scene-congruency effect or a modulation of scene congruency by scene inversion. These findings question the generalizability of previous observations and cast doubt on whether genuine semantic processing of object-background relationships in scenes can manifest during interocular suppression.Keywords: consciousness; open data; subliminal perception; visual perception
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27225219 DOI: 10.1177/0956797616642525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976