“…The phenomenon of blindsight is a prime example of a much more profound dissociation brought about through lesions of visual cortex (Cowey & Stoerig, 1991), however our results suggest that even in neurologically intact individuals, an observer's subjective visibility of a stimulus can be modulated independently of their ability to accurately discriminate its identity. Indeed, there is a growing body of psychophysical work pointing to the separability of subjective and objective visual reports (Koizumi et al, 2015;Lau & Passingham, 2006;Maniscalco et al, 2016;Odegaard et al, 2018;Rahnev et al, 2011;Samaha et al, 2016Samaha et al, , 2019Samaha & Denison, 2020;Zylberberg et al, 2012Zylberberg et al, , 2014. In all of these cases (though perhaps less so in neurological blindsight), there is a question as to which metric, the objective or subjective, better tracks observers' conscious experience.…”