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Two stages of processing for visual awareness identified in a novel inattentional blindness video-game paradigm

Poster Session A - Saturday, March 7, 2026, 3:00 – 5:00 pm PST, Fairview/Kitsilano Ballrooms

Michael Pitts1 (mpitts@reed.edu), Gennadiy Belonosov2, Oscar Ferrante3, Ling Liu4, Rony Hirschhorn2, Ole Jensen5, Huan Luo4, Lucia Melloni6, Liad Mudrik2; 1Reed College, 2Tel Aviv University, 3University of Surrey, 4Peking University, 5University of Oxford, 6Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics

What is the difference in neural processing when we are aware versus unaware of a stimulus? Previous attempts to identify neural signals uniquely associated with visual awareness have faced several challenges. A critical one has been to isolate neural events linked with perception from those associated with reporting one’s perception. To address this, we developed a dual-task inattention paradigm in which participants played an engaging video-game as the primary task, while face and object stimuli were occasionally presented in the background. In 1/3 of the trials, a secondary task was presented immediately after stimulus offset (500ms post-stimulus-onset): the game was paused and participants were prompted to report whether they just saw a stimulus. We first analyzed MEG-EEG data from the report trials. We then trained a pattern classifier to differentiate reported-seen versus reported-unseen trials, and used it to label the remaining 2/3 of the EEG data (no-report trials). In the report trials, we found a visual awareness negativity (VAN; ~220-270ms) followed by a fronto-central negativity (fcN2) and concurrent late bilateral occipital positivity (LBOP) from ~320-550ms. The P3b was also evident but only at ~800-1000ms post-stimulus (~300-500ms after the report-prompts). In the classifier-labeled no-report trials, we found the VAN and fcN2/LBOP with no evidence for P3b. These results demonstrate the potency of this paradigm and classification approach for isolating neural events linked with conscious perception from perceptual-reports. They also suggest that after the VAN, there may be a second stage of processing necessary for visual awareness, indexed here by the fcN2/LBOP.

Topic Area: ATTENTION: Other

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March 7 – 10, 2026