Low-level phenomenal vision despite unilateral destruction of primary visual cortex
- PMID: 11790045
- DOI: 10.1006/ccog.2001.0526
Low-level phenomenal vision despite unilateral destruction of primary visual cortex
Abstract
GY, an extensively studied human hemianope, is aware of salient visual events in his cortically blind field but does not call this "vision." To learn whether he has low-level conscious visual sensations or whether instead he has gained conscious knowledge about, or access to, visual information that does not produce a conscious phenomenal sensation, we attempted to image process a stimulus s presented to the impaired field so that when the transformed stimulus T(s) was presented to the normal hemifield it would cause a sensation similar to that caused by s in the impaired field. While degradation of contrast, spatio-temporal filtering, contrast reversal, and addition of smear and random blobs all failed to match the response to a flashed bar s(f), moving textures of low contrast were accepted to match the response to a moving contrast-defined bar, s(m). Orientation and motion direction discrimination of the perceptually matched stimuli [s(m) and T(s(m))] was closely similar. We suggest that the existence of a satisfactory match indicates that GY has phenomenal vision.
Copyright 2001 Elsevier Science (USA).
Comment in
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Why do stationary visual transients apparently fail to elicit phenomenal vision after unilateral destruction of primary visual cortex?Conscious Cogn. 2001 Dec;10(4):588-90; discussion 591-3. doi: 10.1006/ccog.2001.0527. Conscious Cogn. 2001. PMID: 11790046 No abstract available.
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