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Cognitive Psychology PSYC231 Perception 2 Dr. Jan Lauwereyns, EA619, ext. 5042.

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Presentation on theme: "Cognitive Psychology PSYC231 Perception 2 Dr. Jan Lauwereyns, EA619, ext. 5042."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cognitive Psychology PSYC231 Perception 2 Dr. Jan Lauwereyns, EA619, ext. 5042

2 Prosopagnosia: Face blindness

3 Light falls on the retina, and is then processed through the visual system. But it only becomes meaningful through interpretation ‘in context’ Divide the environment in meaningful units Usually: Objects Organisation of visual information, in structures or patterns that we ‘know’ At a level of complexity that is relevant for our behaviour, for our goals and worries The “What" (Ventral) Stream: Object Recognition

4 Figure 3.9 (p. 63) A model for recognizing letters by analyzing their features. The stimulus, A, activates three feature-units. These feature-units cause strong activation of the A letter-unit and weaker activation of units for letters such as the N and the O, which lack some of A’s features. The A is identified by the high level of activation of the A letter-unit.

5 Figure 3.10 (p. 64) Different kinds of A’s that share features.

6 Feature Integration (simple to complex) Recognition by Components, RBC (Biederman) – Visual ‘alphabet’ – Infinite combinations – accommodates propositional descriptions – importance of ‘junction points’ – Viewpoint-independent

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10 Figure 3.22 (p. 72) (a) A familiar object; (b) the same object seen from a viewpoint that obscures most of its geons and therefore makes it harder to recognize.

11 Can you read this?

12 The template-matching approach –E.g., bar codes –But requires infinite number, each template has to be learned as new, not robust against visual degradation –Matching to exemplars based on similarity –Viewpoint-dependent

13 Arcimbaldo

14 The Forest Has Eyes, Bev Doolittle

15 Are faces special? One of my favorites: the “greeble” study by Gauthier et al (1999, Nat. Neurosci.)

16 Comparing “greeble” recognition between novices and experts

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18 Perceptual Organisation Gestalt laws: –Simplicity (Closure) –Similarity –Good continuation –Proximity –Common fate –Familiarity

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20 a b c d e f g h i j k l n p o m q r s t

21 a b c d e f g h i j k l n p o m q r s t

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23 Familiarity

24 Influence of context Objects are not presented in isolation Effects of visual context –E.g., 3D illusion Effects of semantic context –E.g., Effects of knowledge, expectation

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29 Difficulties for machine vision: Maximal interpretation from minimal information


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