早期人类视觉对线条画中三维方向的敏感性。

J T Enns
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引用次数: 29

摘要

现代“教科书式”的视觉感知观包含着一个内在的悖论。一方面,它声称相对简单的边缘提取过程需要大约50毫秒的刺激暴露。另一方面,它表示,在短至100毫秒的曝光时间内,照片和线条画中的物体识别可以非常准确。我们很容易得出这样的结论:所有困难的感知工作都发生在这两个任务完成之间的50毫秒内。这篇文章反驳了这一观点,认为早期视觉过程完成的不仅仅是边缘提取。为了说明这一观点,本文描述了一个计算模型,该模型能够从一些线条图中快速并行地恢复物体的三维方向。从最近的人类观察者的视觉搜索实验数据,以支持这一模型,并讨论了这一观点对“教科书”观点的影响。
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Sensitivity of early human vision to 3-D orientation in line-drawings.

The modern "textbook" view of visual perception contains an inherent paradox. On the one hand, it claims that relatively simple edge-extraction processes requires a stimulus exposure of approximately 50 ms. On the other hand, it says that the identification of objects in photographs and line-drawings can be highly accurate with exposure durations as short as 100 ms. It is tempting to conclude that all the difficult work of perception occurs in the 50 ms that elapse between when these two tasks are accomplished. This article argues against this view, suggesting instead that much more than edge-extraction is accomplished by the early visual processes. To illustrate this view, a computational model is described that is capable of recovering the 3-D orientation of objects from some line-drawings, rapidly and in parallel. Data from recent visual search experiments with human observers are presented in support of this model and the implications of this view for the "textbook" view are discussed.

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