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2025.11.19News

The paper by Prof. Tetsuto Minami and his research group has been accepted by Consciousness and Cognition!

 The paper by Prof. Tetsuto Minami, leader of the Publicly Offered Research Group, and his research group has been accepted by Consciousness and Cognition!

 In this paper, we demonstrate that 'subjective brightness', as enhanced by the glare illusion, can be processed and discriminated subconsciously, even when it remains outside the realm of conscious awareness.


The full text is available to read in Open Access. We would be very happy if you did.



Paper Information


Authors: Hirotaka Senda, Michael Makoto Martinsen, Hideki Tamura, Shigeki Nakauchi, Tetsuto Minami

Title: Illusory brightness under unconscious processing: Evidence from continuous flash suppression

Journal: Consciousness and Cognition, Volume 136, 2025, 103943, ISSN 1053-8100

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2025.103943



Abstract

 Brightness perception can diverge sharply from physical luminance due to contextual cues, but whether such illusory brightness is registered without awareness and whether it speeds entry into awareness remain open questions. We used continuous flash suppression (CFS) to test the glare illusion, which increases perceived brightness without changing central luminance. In Experiment 1, we measured breakthrough time (BT) and found no advantage for glare over physically identical controls, indicating that subjective brightness alone does not reliably hasten access to awareness. In Experiment 2, we selectively suppressed the illusion’s inducer gradients while leaving the central region visible; here the glare condition showed shorter BTs, suggesting that contextual structure can facilitate detection under suppression. In Experiment 3, participants discriminated both physically brighter stimuli and illusory brightness above chance while the stimuli remained suppressed, demonstrating unconscious processing of brightness information. Together, these findings dissociate unconscious encoding from access to awareness: illusory brightness can be processed without consciousness, yet it does not uniformly accelerate emergence into awareness unless the relevant contextual cues are available to the visual system.


Keywords: Continuous Flash Suppression; Illusion; Brightness Perception