Criteria for Unconscious Cognition: Three Types of Dissociation
Overview
Psychology
Authors
Affiliations
To demonstrate unconscious cognition, researchers commonly compare a direct measure (D) of awareness for a critical stimulus with an indirect measure (I) showing that the stimulus was cognitively processed at all. We discuss and empirically demonstrate three types of dissociation with distinct appearances in D-I plots, in which direct and indirect effects are plotted against each other in a shared effect size metric. Simple dissociations between D and I occur when I has some nonzero value and D is at chance level; the traditional requirement of zero awareness is necessary for this criterion only. Sensitivity dissociations only require that I be larger than D; double dissociations occur whensome experimental manipulation has opposite effects on I and D. We show that double dissociations require much weaker measurement assumptions than do other criteria. Several alternative approaches can be considered special cases of our framework.
The influence of signal strength on conscious and nonconscious neural processing of emotional faces.
Schlossmacher I, Herbig M, Dellert T, Straube T, Bruchmann M Neurosci Conscious. 2025; 2025(1):niaf001.
PMID: 39916700 PMC: 11799861. DOI: 10.1093/nc/niaf001.
Consciousness Under the Spotlight: The Problem of Measuring Subjective Experience.
Jimenez M, Prieto A, Hinojosa J, Montoro P Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2024; 16(1):e1697.
PMID: 39449331 PMC: 11652689. DOI: 10.1002/wcs.1697.
Kiefer M, Kammer T J Cogn. 2024; 7(1):59.
PMID: 39035071 PMC: 11259121. DOI: 10.5334/joc.381.
No evidence for contextual cueing beyond explicit recognition.
Meyen S, Vadillo M, von Luxburg U, Franz V Psychon Bull Rev. 2023; 31(3):907-930.
PMID: 37845567 PMC: 11192686. DOI: 10.3758/s13423-023-02358-3.
Subjective and objective measures of visual awareness converge.
Kiefer M, Fruhauf V, Kammer T PLoS One. 2023; 18(10):e0292438.
PMID: 37788260 PMC: 10547206. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0292438.