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Journal ArticleDOI

Timing of the brain events underlying access to consciousness during the attentional blink

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TLDR
It is suggested that the transition toward access to consciousness relates to the optional triggering of a late wave of activation that spreads through a distributed network of cortical association areas.
Abstract
In the phenomenon of attentional blink, identical visual stimuli are sometimes fully perceived and sometimes not detected at all. This phenomenon thus provides an optimal situation to study the fate of stimuli not consciously perceived and the differences between conscious and nonconscious processing. We correlated behavioral visibility ratings and recordings of event-related potentials to study the temporal dynamics of access to consciousness. Intact early potentials (P1 and N1) were evoked by unseen words, suggesting that these brain events are not the primary correlates of conscious perception. However, we observed a rapid divergence around 270 ms, after which several brain events were evoked solely by seen words. Thus, we suggest that the transition toward access to consciousness relates to the optional triggering of a late wave of activation that spreads through a distributed network of cortical association areas.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Neural architectures for thinking, reasoning and being conscious

TL;DR: Possible architectures to achieve the first two of these attributes are proposed, the first of these being based on those for the mental simulation loop suggested as being at the basis of thinking.
Journal ArticleDOI

The autistic brain can process local but not global emotion regularities in facial and musical sequences

TL;DR: This article used event-related potentials to investigate whether individuals with ASD would show different neural responses to local (within trial) versus global (across trials) emotion regularities extracted from sequential facial expressions; and whether this visual abnormality would generalize to the music domain.
Journal ArticleDOI

It's time for attentional control: Temporal expectation in the attentional blink

TL;DR: In this paper , the role of temporal expectation in modulating the attentional blink performance was reviewed and it was shown that both temporal expectations can help to organize limited resources among multiple attentional episodes, thereby mitigating the AB effect.
References
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Book

A cognitive theory of consciousness

TL;DR: In this article, the basic model of conscious representations are internally consistent and globally distributed, and the neural basis of conscious experience is explained, including the fundamental role of context, goal contexts, spontaneous problem solving and the stream of consciousness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temporary suppression of visual processing in an RSVP task: an attentional blink? .

TL;DR: The authors found that the presentation of stimuli after the target but before target-identification processes are complete produces interference at a letter recognition stage, which may cause the temporary suppression of visual attention mechanisms observed in the present study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electromagnetic brain mapping

TL;DR: The underlying models currently used in MEG/EEG source estimation are described and the various signal processing steps required to compute these sources are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reference-free identification of components of checkerboard-evoked multichannel potential fields

TL;DR: A method is proposed to determine components of evoked scalp potentials, in terms of times of occurrence (latency) and location on the scalp (topography), suggesting a stable localization of the generating process in depth.
Journal ArticleDOI

A two-stage model for multiple target detection in rapid serial visual presentation.

TL;DR: Results of Experiments 3-5 confirmed that AB is triggered by local interference from immediate posttarget stimulation and showed thatAB is modulated by the discriminability between the 1st target and the immediately following distractor.
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