4.5 Article

Experiencing without knowing? Empirical evidence for phenomenal consciousness without access

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Biology

Hypotheses on a tree: new error rates and testing strategies

Marina Bogomolov et al.

Summary: The study introduces a multiple testing procedure that controls global error rates at multiple levels of resolution by organizing hypotheses hierarchically in a tree structure. Through a fast algorithm and assumptions on p-value dependence, it is proven to effectively control relevant error rates. Simulations demonstrate the desired guarantees across a range of dependency structures and suggest potential for increased power compared to alternative methods.

BIOMETRIKA (2021)

Letter Behavioral Sciences

The Fundamental Problem with No-Cognition Paradigms

Ian Phillips et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2020)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Visual Functions Generating Conscious Seeing

Victor A. F. Lamme

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2020)

Review Behavioral Sciences

What Is Wrong with the No-Report Paradigm and How to Fix It

Ned Block

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2019)

Review Biology

Why and how access consciousness can account for phenomenal consciousness

Lionel Naccache

PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2018)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Perceptual integration without conscious access

Johannes J. Fahrenfort et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2017)

Review Behavioral Sciences

What is the Bandwidth of Perceptual Experience?

Michael A. Cohen et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2016)

Article Neurosciences

Seeing without Knowing: Neural Signatures of Perceptual Inference in the Absence of Report

Annelinde R. E. Vandenbroucke et al.

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2014)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Information integration without awareness

Liad Mudrik et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2014)

Editorial Material Behavioral Sciences

Rich conscious perception outside focal attention

Ned Block

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2014)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

We See More Than We Can Report: Cost Free Color Phenomenality Outside Focal Attention

Zohar Z. Bronfman et al.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2014)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Cueing Attention after the Stimulus Is Gone Can Retrospectively Trigger Conscious Perception

Claire Sergent et al.

CURRENT BIOLOGY (2013)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Distilling the neural correlates of consciousness

Jaan Aru et al.

NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS (2012)

Letter Behavioral Sciences

Do we still need phenomenal consciousness? Comment on Block

Sid Kouider et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2012)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Empirical support for higher-order theories of conscious awareness

Hakwan Lau et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2011)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Consciousness cannot be separated from function

Michael A. Cohen et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2011)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Perceptual consciousness overflows cognitive access

Ned Block

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2011)

Article Linguistics

Perception and Iconic Memory: What Sperling Doesn't Show

Ian B. Phillips

MIND & LANGUAGE (2011)

Review Behavioral Sciences

How rich is consciousness? The partial awareness hypothesis

Sid Kouider et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2010)

Article Psychology, Experimental

Perceptual illusions in brief visual presentations

Vincent de Gardelle et al.

CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION (2009)

Article Psychology, Biological

Consciousness, accessibility, and the mesh between psychology and neuroscience

Ned Block

BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES (2007)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Two neural correlates of consciousness

N Block

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2005)

Article Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence

Separate neural definitions of visual consciousness and visual attention; a case for phenomenal awareness

VAF Lamme

NEURAL NETWORKS (2004)

Review Neurosciences

The distinct modes of vision offered by feedforward and recurrent processing

VAF Lamme et al.

TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES (2000)