Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.

Blindsight patients, whose primary visual cortex is lesioned, exhibit preserved ability to discriminate visual stimuli presented in their "blind" field, yet report no visual awareness hereof. Blindsight is generally studied in experimental investigations of single patients, as very few pat...

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Main Authors: Morten Overgaard, Katrin Fehl, Kim Mouridsen, Bo Bergholt, Axel Cleeremans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2507770?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ab19a132240d4dfc82f34c23b281bb372020-11-25T01:46:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-01-0138e302810.1371/journal.pone.0003028Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.Morten OvergaardKatrin FehlKim MouridsenBo BergholtAxel CleeremansBlindsight patients, whose primary visual cortex is lesioned, exhibit preserved ability to discriminate visual stimuli presented in their "blind" field, yet report no visual awareness hereof. Blindsight is generally studied in experimental investigations of single patients, as very few patients have been given this "diagnosis". In our single case study of patient GR, we ask whether blindsight is best described as unconscious vision, or rather as conscious, yet severely degraded vision. In experiment 1 and 2, we successfully replicate the typical findings of previous studies on blindsight. The third experiment, however, suggests that GR's ability to discriminate amongst visual stimuli does not reflect unconscious vision, but rather degraded, yet conscious vision. As our finding results from using a method for obtaining subjective reports that has not previously used in blindsight studies (but validated in studies of healthy subjects and other patients with brain injury), our results call for a reconsideration of blindsight, and, arguably also of many previous studies of unconscious perception in healthy subjects.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2507770?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Morten Overgaard
Katrin Fehl
Kim Mouridsen
Bo Bergholt
Axel Cleeremans
spellingShingle Morten Overgaard
Katrin Fehl
Kim Mouridsen
Bo Bergholt
Axel Cleeremans
Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Morten Overgaard
Katrin Fehl
Kim Mouridsen
Bo Bergholt
Axel Cleeremans
author_sort Morten Overgaard
title Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.
title_short Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.
title_full Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.
title_fullStr Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.
title_full_unstemmed Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient.
title_sort seeing without seeing? degraded conscious vision in a blindsight patient.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Blindsight patients, whose primary visual cortex is lesioned, exhibit preserved ability to discriminate visual stimuli presented in their "blind" field, yet report no visual awareness hereof. Blindsight is generally studied in experimental investigations of single patients, as very few patients have been given this "diagnosis". In our single case study of patient GR, we ask whether blindsight is best described as unconscious vision, or rather as conscious, yet severely degraded vision. In experiment 1 and 2, we successfully replicate the typical findings of previous studies on blindsight. The third experiment, however, suggests that GR's ability to discriminate amongst visual stimuli does not reflect unconscious vision, but rather degraded, yet conscious vision. As our finding results from using a method for obtaining subjective reports that has not previously used in blindsight studies (but validated in studies of healthy subjects and other patients with brain injury), our results call for a reconsideration of blindsight, and, arguably also of many previous studies of unconscious perception in healthy subjects.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2507770?pdf=render
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