Abstract

A stable form of interocular suppression, referred to as "permanent suppression," can be produced by presenting a contoured field to one eye and a spatially homogenous field to the fellow eye, a viewing condition analogous to the classic "hole-in-the-hand" illusion. We examined the relation between permanent suppression and binocular rivalry suppression by comparing the changes in the increment-threshold spectral sensitivity function produced by these two forms of suppression. Permanent suppression produced a reduction in spectral sensitivity; however, in contrast to binocular rivalry suppression, the sensitivity alterations associated with permanent suppression were independent of the test-probe wavelength. The different patterns of sensitivity loss observed during binocular rivalry and permanent suppression indicate that different neural mechanisms mediate these two forms of interocular suppression.

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