A late meta-stable code of conscious access in the absence of report
The paper investigates whether conscious access to perceptual information can be detected in no-report paradigms where the P3b component is absent. Using EEG re-analyses of four no-report inattentional blindness datasets, the authors apply cross-time multivariate decoding to test for late metastable neural activity linked to stimuli that were consciously seen but task-irrelevant. They find robust temporal generalization of decoding across multiple stimulus types (shapes, faces, words), occurring most consistently 200–400 ms after stimulus onset, and note that this pattern is independent of report requirements and whether a P3b is evoked. The authors’ explicit limitation is that the study does not directly provide a P3b-based mechanism, instead focusing on decoding signatures in a late time window. The paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.
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- last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00