When the brain changes its mind: Interocular grouping during binocular rivalry
- 24 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 93 (26) , 15508-15511
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.26.15508
Abstract
The prevalent view of binocular rivalry holds that it is a competition between the two eyes mediated by reciprocal inhibition among monocular neurons. This view is largely due to the nature of conventional rivalry-inducing stimuli, which are pairs of dissimilar images with coherent patterns within each eye's image. Is it the eye of origin or the coherency of patterns that determines perceptual alternations between coherent percepts in binocular rivalry? We break the coherency of conventional stimuli and replace them by complementary patchworks of intermingled rivalrous images. Can the brain unscramble the pieces of the patchwork arriving from different eyes to obtain coherent percepts? We find that pattern coherency in itself can drive perceptual alternations, and the patchworks are reassembled into coherent forms by most observers. This result is in agreement with recent neurophysiological and psychophysical evidence demonstrating that there is more to binocular rivalry than mere eye competition.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Visual perception: rivalry and consciousnessNature, 1996
- Blindsight in normal observersNature, 1995
- Cortical areas in visual awarenessNature, 1995
- Interocular control of neuronal responsiveness in cat visual cortexNature, 1994
- Binocular Rivalry Disrupts StereopsisPerception, 1994
- An Astable Multivibrator Model of Binocular RivalryPerception, 1988
- Stereopsis and binocular rivalry.Psychological Review, 1986
- Stochastic properties of binocular rivalry alternationsPerception & Psychophysics, 1975
- Some experiments on figural effects in binocular rivalryPerception & Psychophysics, 1968
- Some Experiments on the Recognition of Speech, with One and with Two EarsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1953