TY - JOUR AB - According to the sensorimotor supremacy hypothesis, conscious perception draws on motor action. In the present report, we will sketch two lines of potential development in the field of masking research based on the sensorimotor supremacy hypothesis. In the first part of the report, evidence is reviewed that masked, invisible stimuli can affect motor responses, attention shifts, and semantic processes. After the review of the corresponding evidence – so-called masked priming effects – an approach based on the sensorimotor supremacy hypothesis is detailed as to how the question of a unitary mechanism of unconscious vision can be pursued by masked priming studies. In the second part of the report, different models and theories of backward masking and masked priming are reviewed. Types of models based on the sensorimotor hypothesis are discussed that can take into account ways in which sensorimotor processes (reflected in masked priming effects) can affect conscious vision under backward masking conditions. DA - 2007 LA - eng IS - 1-2 M2 - 257 PY - 2007 SN - 1895-1171 SP - 257-274 T2 - Advances in Cognitive Psychology TI - Sensorimotor supremacy: Investigating conscious and unconscious vision by masked priming UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0070-pub-26925397 Y2 - 2024-11-21T22:45:44 ER -