Emotions and Affect in Human Factors and Human-Computer Interaction 2017
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-801851-4.00019-7
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Subliminal Perception or “Can We Perceive and Be Influenced by Stimuli That Do Not Reach Us on a Conscious Level?”

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Cited by 9 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Mental information processing can proceed also in its subliminal mode, meaning that not all sensory signals that are veridically encoded and adequately responded to are consciously experienced (for reviews, see Tulving et al, 1982; Kim and Blake, 2005; Mitchell, 2006; Kouider and Dehaene, 2007; Riener, 2017). Only part of the signals carrying contents become conscious.…”
Section: Non-conscious Contents In a Conscious Statementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mental information processing can proceed also in its subliminal mode, meaning that not all sensory signals that are veridically encoded and adequately responded to are consciously experienced (for reviews, see Tulving et al, 1982; Kim and Blake, 2005; Mitchell, 2006; Kouider and Dehaene, 2007; Riener, 2017). Only part of the signals carrying contents become conscious.…”
Section: Non-conscious Contents In a Conscious Statementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The bottleneck at work here concern informational ratios of discriminative rates over generative ones. The amount of information that can be brought to a particular sensory modality for human perception is subject to bandwidth and dimensional limitations (Wickens, 1974;Venturino and Eggemeier, 1987;Klingberg, 2000;Marois and Ivanoff, 2005;Riener, 2017)exceeding these rates cause well-known fatigue and disengagement. They can be P. CUTELLIC measured in perceived mental efforts at various levels from physiological and behavioral signals as a cognitive load (Sweller and al., 1998;Xie and Salvendy, 2000;Paas and al., 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The bottleneck at work here concern informational ratios of discriminative rates over generative ones. The amount of information that can be brought to a particular sensory modality for human perception is subject to bandwidth and dimensional limitations (Wickens, 1974;Venturino and Eggemeier, 1987;Klingberg, 2000;Marois and Ivanoff, 2005;Riener, 2017)exceeding these rates cause well-known fatigue and disengagement. They can be P. CUTELLIC measured in perceived mental efforts at various levels from physiological and behavioral signals as a cognitive load (Sweller and al., 1998;Xie and Salvendy, 2000;Paas and al., 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%