2014
DOI: 10.3758/s13414-014-0743-y
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Semantic access occurs outside of awareness for the ground side of a figure

Abstract: Traditional theories of vision assume that figures and grounds are assigned early in processing, with semantics being accessed later and only by figures, not by grounds. We tested this assumption by showing observers novel silhouettes with borders that suggested familiar objects on their ground side. The ground appeared shapeless near the figure's borders; the familiar objects suggested there were not consciously perceived. Participants' task was to categorize words shown immediately after the silhouettes as n… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…; Cacciamani et al. ; see figure ). Of particular interest for the current discussion: the test that showed this was a lexical decision task (where the subject has to say whether a string of letters forms a word or a non‐word).…”
Section: How Conceptualism Saves Modularitymentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…; Cacciamani et al. ; see figure ). Of particular interest for the current discussion: the test that showed this was a lexical decision task (where the subject has to say whether a string of letters forms a word or a non‐word).…”
Section: How Conceptualism Saves Modularitymentioning
confidence: 92%
“…A sample figure/ground stimuli used in Cacciamani et al. (). Even when the white boots are not consciously perceived as such and are instead seen as ground, they still cause unconscious conceptual activation.…”
Section: How Conceptualism Saves Modularitymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Thus, we disagree that subcortical activation alone will be sufficient for causing a conscious feeling. Just as a meaningful object can be detected by the visual system, and its colors, shape, texture, and conceptual interpretation can be represented, all without that shape being consciously experienced or recognized (Cacciamani et al, 2014;Dehaene, 2014;Dehaene et al, 2006;Sanguinetti et al, 2014), we suggest that emotional reactions can also be initiated, detected, and represented without being selected for conscious access (and hence without generating a reportable/verifiable subjective feeling). While the theoretical models appealed to by CN make it clear exactly when and why an event -whether cognitive or affective -will be consciously experienced (i.e., it must be represented and successfully compete for conscious access), it is not clear from the AN perspective why some cognitive processes can be unconscious but some affective processes can not.…”
Section: B Critique Of the An Perspective (By Rs And Rdl)mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The alternative view, however, posits that feedforward as well as feedback processing is necessary for conscious object perception (Bullier, 2001;Lamme & Roelfsema, 2000;Nadel & Peterson, 2013;Peterson & Cacciamani, 2013). Specifically, on an initial feedforward pass, objects that might be perceived on opposite sides of a shared border are assessed up to high levels of the visual system (for evidence consistent with this claim, see Cacciamani, Mojica, Sanguinetti, & Peterson, 2014;Peterson, Cacciamani, Mojica, and Sanguinetti, 2012;. The best interpretation (i.e., the "winner") is selected through a competitive process that entails suppression of the shape in the "losing" region and the…”
Section: Competition-mediated Ground Suppressionmentioning
confidence: 99%