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Dartmouth College

Consciousness

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Full-Text Articles in Neuroscience and Neurobiology

Unconscious Neural Processing Differs With Method Used To Render Stimuli Invisible, Sergey V. Fogelson, Peter J. Kohler, Kevin J. Miller, Richard Granger, Peter U. Tse Jun 2014

Unconscious Neural Processing Differs With Method Used To Render Stimuli Invisible, Sergey V. Fogelson, Peter J. Kohler, Kevin J. Miller, Richard Granger, Peter U. Tse

Dartmouth Scholarship

Visual stimuli can be kept from awareness using various methods. The extent of processing that a given stimulus receives in the absence of awareness is typically used to make claims about the role of consciousness more generally. The neural processing elicited by a stimulus, however, may also depend on the method used to keep it from awareness, and not only on whether the stimulus reaches awareness. Here we report that the method used to render an image invisible has a dramatic effect on how category information about the unseen stimulus is encoded across the human brain. We collected fMRI data …


Implicitly Priming The Social Brain: Failure To Find Neural Effects, Katherine E. Powers, Todd F. Heatherton Feb 2013

Implicitly Priming The Social Brain: Failure To Find Neural Effects, Katherine E. Powers, Todd F. Heatherton

Dartmouth Scholarship

Humans have a fundamental need for social relationships. Rejection from social groups is especially detrimental, rendering the ability to detect threats to social relationships and respond in adaptive ways critical. Indeed, previous research has shown that experiencing social rejection alters the processing of subsequent social cues in a variety of socially affiliative and avoidant ways. Because social perception and cognition occurs spontaneously and automatically, detecting threats to social relationships may occur without conscious awareness or control. Here, we investigated the automaticity of social threat detection by examining how implicit primes affect neural responses to social stimuli. However, despite using a …