Faces in commonly experienced configurations enter awareness faster due to their curvature relative to fixation

PeerJ. 2016 Jan 14:4:e1565. doi: 10.7717/peerj.1565. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

The extent to which perceptually suppressed face stimuli are still processed has been extensively studied using the continuous flash suppression paradigm (CFS). Studies that rely on breaking CFS (b-CFS), in which the time it takes for an initially suppressed stimulus to become detectable is measured, have provided evidence for relatively complex processing of invisible face stimuli. In contrast, adaptation and neuroimaging studies have shown that perceptually suppressed faces are only processed for a limited set of features, such as its general shape. In this study, we asked whether perceptually suppressed face stimuli presented in their commonly experienced configuration would break suppression faster than when presented in an uncommonly experienced configuration. This study was motivated by a recent neuroimaging study showing that commonly experienced face configurations are more strongly represented in the fusiform face area. Our findings revealed that faces presented in commonly experienced configurations indeed broke suppression faster, yet this effect did not interact with face inversion suggesting that, in a b-CFS context, perceptually suppressed faces are potentially not processed by specialized (high-level) face processing mechanisms. Rather, our pattern of results is consistent with an interpretation based on the processing of more basic visual properties such as convexity.

Keywords: Binocular rivalry; Consciousness; Continuous flash suppression; Curvature; Face processing; Visual awareness; b-CFS.

Grants and funding

Pieter Moors and Lee de-Wit are respectively doctoral and postdoctoral fellows of the Research Foundation–Flanders (FWO). This work was supported in part by the Methusalem program by the Flemish Government (METH/14/02), awarded to Johan Wagemans. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.