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The research is based on a visual process called "binocular rivalry."
Next, they were shown these faces again during a binocular rivalry test.
Binocular rivalry has engaged scholars since it was discovered in 1593.
The researchers conducted the study around an accepted phenomenon known as binocular rivalry.
Various theories were proposed to account for binocular rivalry.
When this conflict is sustained without any abrupt events, binocular rivalry occurs.
A perceptual illusion that can be precisely controlled is binocular rivalry.
This alternation of perception between the images of the two eyes is called binocular rivalry.
(But such impossible colors can be perceived due to binocular rivalry.)
They created an experimental situation in which conflicting images were presented to different eyes (i.e., binocular rivalry).
Dynamics of the pupil during binocular rivalry.
For example, the strength (depth) of flash suppression seems much stronger than that of binocular rivalry.
Although Wheatstone's discovery of stereopsis supported fusion theory, he still had to account for binocular rivalry.
- Effects of psilocybin on binocular rivalry.
Flash suppression has certain methodological advantages over binocular rivalry as a tool for probing conscious vision.
Other theories of binocular rivalry dealt more with how it occurs than why it occurs.
In both flash suppression and binocular rivalry, perceptual conflict between the two eyes is required for the perceptual effect.
Breese attributed monocular rivalry to the same mechanism as responsible for binocular rivalry.
Binocular rivalry is a phenomenon of visual perception in which perception alternates between different images presented to each eye.
See also binocular rivalry.
Stereoscopic depth and binocular rivalry.
If two similar images are used, fusion of the two images is experienced, rather than flash suppression or binocular rivalry.
Recent work uses binocular rivalry as an assay for interhemispheric switching, whose rhythm is altered in bipolar disorder.
Other phenomena of binocular vision include utrocular discrimination, eye dominance, allelotropia, and binocular rivalry.
The paper demonstrates that imagining a specific visual stimulus can strongly bias which of two subsequent competing stimuli reach awareness during binocular rivalry.