Effects of hunger on visual perception in binocular rivalry

  • Xin Weng
  • , Qi Lin
  • , Ye Ma
  • , Yu Peng
  • , Yang Hu
  • , Ke Zhou
  • , Fengtao Shen
  • , Huimin Wang*
  • , Zhaoxin Wang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

The effect of hunger on visual perception is largely absent from contemporary vision science. Using a well-established visual phenomenon termed binocular rivalry, this study was carried out to investigate the effects of hunger on visual perception. A within-subject design was applied in which participants attended two sessions before and after their lunch or dinner, i.e., a hunger state and a satiated state. In Experiment 1, we found that the mean dominance times to food-related pictures were larger in the hungry condition than that in the satiated condition, while the mean dominance time to the non-food stimuli were unaffected. In Experiment 2, we found the times to break through continuous flash suppression (b-CFS) for both food-related and non-food-related pictures were not affected by hunger. In Experiment 3, a probe-detection task was conducted to address possible response-biases. Our findings provide evidence that hunger biases the dynamic process of binocular rivalry to unsuppressed and visible food stimuli, while processing suppressed and invisible food-related was unaffected. Our results support the notion that the top-down modulation by hunger on food-related visual perception is limited to visible stimuli.

Original languageEnglish
Article number418
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume10
Issue numberMAR
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • B-CFS
  • Binocular rivalry
  • Dominance time
  • Hunger
  • Probe-detection

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