Bibliographical data for
Author
Title of Edited Collection
Open MIND
Editors
Publication Date
January 2015
Publication Place
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
ISBN
9783958570092
Abstract
There is conscious vision, and there is unconscious visual processing. So far so good. But where lies the boundary between the two? What are the visual functions that shape the transition from “processing in the dark” to having a conscious visual percept? And what are the neural mechanisms that carry that transition? I review the findings on feature detection, object categorization, interference, inference, Gestalt grouping, and perceptual organization, and examine to what extent these functions correlate with the presence or absence of conscious vision. It turns out that a surprisingly large set of visual functions is executed unconsciously, indicating that unconscious vision is much “smarter” than we might intuitively think. Only when these unconscious mechanisms fail, and more elaborate and incremental processing steps are required, is consciousness necessary. The function of conscious vision may be to add a final layer to our interpretation of the world, to solve relatively “new” visual problems, and to enable visual learning.
Keywords
Access,
Anaesthesia,
Attention,
Consciousness,
Continuous flash suppression,
Feature detection,
Gaba,
Gestalt laws,
Human,
Masking,
Monkey,
Nmda,
Object categorization,
P-consciousness,
Perceptual inference,
Perceptual interference,
Perceptual organization,
Phenomenal experience,
Qualia,
Report,
Rivalry,
The hard problem,
Visual cortex,
Visual perception