Perception
Perception
2) The system must be able to determine where objects of interests are in the
external environment
3) The perceptual system must be able to determine which objects are out there
in the environment
Selective Attention
The term selective attention refers to the fact that we usually focus out attention on one
or a few tasks or events rather than on many. We mentally focus our resources implies that we shut
out (or atleast process less information from) other competing tasks. As attention researcher Hal
Pashle puts it
at any given moment [people’s] awareness encompasses only a tiny proportion
of the stimuli impringing on their sensory systems
Eye Movements
The process of seeing starts with visual
scanning in the form of fixations, which
are – brief periods during which the eyes
are relatively stationary, separated by
saccades, which are – quick jumps of the
eye from one place to the next.
Humans can also selectively attend to some visual stimulus without moving their
eyes. In experiments that demonstrate this, observers have to detect when an
object occurs. On each trial, the person stares at a blank field and then sees a
brief cue, which is a directing stimulus such as a small arrow that directs the
subject to attend wither to the left or to the right. An object is then presented
either in a location indicated by the cue or the opposite location. The interval
between the cue and the object is too brief for observers to move their eyes, yet
then can detect the object faster in the cued location than when it occurs than
elsewhere.
Localization
Localization is achieved by first separating the objects from one another and the
separating each from the background
Separation of Objects
The regions seen as figure contains the objects of interest, which appear more
solid than the ground and appear in front of it. The ground is the region that
appears to be behind the figure.
Figure Ground Relationship
Monocular Cues
1) Relative Size – If an image contains an array of similar objects that differ in size, the
viewer intercepts the smaller objects as being farther away
2) Interposition – If an object is positioned so that it obstructs the view of the other, the
viewer perceives the overlapping object as being nearer
3) Relative Height – Among similar objects, those that appear closer to the horizon are
perceived as being farther away
4) Perspective – When parallel lines in a scene appear to converge in the image, they are
perceived as vanishing in the distance
5) Shading & Shadows – the configuration if shading and shadows provides information
about an objects depth
Interposition
Perceiving Distance
Perceiving distance requires depth cues, different kinds of visual information that, logically
or mathematically, provide information about some objects depth
Depth Cues
• Eleanor Gibson and her Visual
Cliff Experiment.
• If you are old enough to
crawl, you are old enough to
see depth perception.
• We see depth by using two
cues that researchers have
put in two categories:
• Monocular Cues
• Binocular Cues
Monocular Cues
Fundamental information assembly starts with the binding problem: how activity in
different parts of the brain, corresponding to different primitives such as color and
shape, are combined into coherent perception of an object.
a) In early stages the perceptual system uses information on the retina, particularly
variation in intensity to describe the object in terms of primitive components such
as lines, edges and angles.
b) In the later stages, the system compares this description to those of various
categories of objects stored in visual memory and select the best match.
There is more to a description of a shape than just its features: The relations among
features must also be specified.
Later stage of Recognition Network
Models
Abstraction – is the process of reducing the vast amount of information that comes in
from the physical world through our senses to a more manageable set of categories
Perceptual Constancies
A remarkable ability of the perceptual systems, is to maintain, Constancy, which refers to the
brain’s ability to maintain a perception of the underlying physical characteristics of an
object, such as shape, size or color, even when the sensory manifestation of these objects
change drastically.
Color constancy – is the ability of the visual system to perceive the reflectance characteristics
– an inherent property of an object – no matter what the source wavelength.
Brightness constancy – refers to the fact that the perceived lightness of a particular object
changes very little, if at all, even when the intensity of the source changes dramatically.
Color and brightness constancy depends on the relations among the intensities of the light
reflected from the different objects
Shape Constancy – refers to the ability of the perceptual system to main shape of objects in
the external environment
Size Constancy – is the ability of the perceptual system to maintain the objects perceived
size relatively constant no matter how far away it is
Constancy
• Objects change in
our eyes constantly
as we or they
move….but we are
able to maintain
content perception
• Shape Constancy
• Size Constancy
• Brightness
Constancy