Mind the gap - How does the brain interpret gaps in visual input?

titleMind the gap - How does the brain interpret gaps in visual input?
start_date2024/04/16
schedule13h
onlineno
location_infoB01 & on Zoom
summaryFor decades, cognitive neuroscience research has sought to reveal neural correlates of consciousness by testing how the human brain encodes sensory information when the participant is unaware of the stimuli. However, the mechanisms giving rise to our conscious experience of the world remain poorly understood.       In one recent study, we used functional MRI in search of neural correlates of a striking illusion, the perceptual completion across the physiological blind spot. Despite a considerable gap in our retinal input in this region, we are rarely aware of its presence, leading many researchers to propose an active mechanism by which the brain fills in the visual scene across this gap. However, our results instead suggest a different explanation, similar to what Daniel Dennett proposed thirty years ago but which has since largely fallen out of fashion (at least among cognitive scientists).        Moreover, I will present results from experiments in which we investigated the role of awareness in interpreting fragmented visual information as coherent objects. Previous research had indicated that stimuli that do not reach awareness are encoded differently from conscious stimuli. Our results support this interpretation and suggest that in the absence of awareness, we only encode local features of stimuli.
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