Abstract
Some of the neurological patients with primary visual cortex (V1) lesions can guide their behavior based on stimuli presented to their blind visual field. One example of this phenomenon is the ability to discriminate colors in the absence of awareness. These so-called patients with blindsight must have a neural pathway that bypasses the V1, explaining their ability to unconsciously process stimuli. To test if similar pathways function in neurologically healthy individuals or if unconscious processing depends on the V1, we disturbed the visibility of a chromatic stimulus with metacontrast masking (Experiment 1) or transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the V1 (Experiment 2). We measured unconscious processing using the redundant target effect (RTE), which is the speeding up of reaction times in response to dual stimuli compared with one stimulus, when the task is to respond to any number of stimuli. An unconscious chromatic RTE was found when the visibility of the redundant chromatic stimulus was suppressed with a visual mask. When TMS was applied to the V1 to disturb the perception of the redundant chromatic stimulus, the RTE was eliminated. Based on our results and converging evidence from previous studies, we conclude that the unconscious processing of chromatic information depends on the V1 in neurologically healthy participants.