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| Volume 3, Number 10, Article 3, Pages 610-615 |
doi:10.1167/3.10.3 |
http://journalofvision.org/3/10/3/ |
ISSN 1534-7362 |
Binocular rivalry in split-brain observers
Robert P. O’Shea |
Department of Psychology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand |
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Paul M. Corballis |
School of Psychology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA |
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Abstract
During binocular rivalry, visual perception switches between a stimulus viewed by one eye and a different stimulus viewed by the other. We studied rivalry in split-brain observers to test two explanations. Rivalry could reflect switching of activity between the cerebral hemispheres, or switching by a structure in the right frontoparietal cortex. From these two theories, we predict no rivalry when stimuli are presented to a split-brain observer’s left hemisphere. Yet we found similar rivalry from the left and right hemispheres of the split-brain observers, consistent with switchings being mediated by low-level processes within each hemisphere.
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