Top Banner
Object Perception
34

Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Jan 15, 2016

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Object Perception

Page 2: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws

Law of Good continuation.This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of strange shapes

Law of Proximity.Items that look are nearby are grouped together

Law of Similarity.Items that look similar will be perceived as being part of the same form

Page 3: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Common Fate

Johannson point light displays

Collection of point light displays: http://astro.temple.edu/~tshipley/mocap/dotMovie.html

From: Emily Grossman

http://www.tutkie.tut.ac.jp/~mich/kitazaki.hm.html

Page 4: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Figure–Ground Segregation

• An ambiguous drawing which can be seen either as two faces or as a goblet

Page 5: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Top-down effects: knowledge influences figure ground separation

Page 6: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Task: are the two x’s on the same shape?

Result: faster performance with upright letters

• The study by Vecera and Farah (1997) suggests the Gestaltists exaggerated the role of bottom-up processes in segmentation

Page 7: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Gestaltists de-emphasised the complexities involved when laws of grouping are in

conflict.

• (a) Display involving a conflict between proximity and similarity; (b) display with a conflict between shape and colour; (c) a different display with a conflict between shape and colour.

Page 8: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Geisler et al. (2001)

• Is our perceptual grouping mechanism tuned to the natural visual environment? Gestalt mechanisms should have a basis in the statistics of the natural world

• Analyzed pairs of edges in natural images.

distance

Angle

Page 9: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Geisler et al. (2001)

• Color shows how likely pairs of edges are to belong to same physical contour when varying distance and angle difference

•Finding: adjacent edges with similar orientations are likely to belong to same contour

•Study validates Gestalt law of good continuation

Figure 3D from Geisler et al. (2001) paper

Page 10: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Geisler et al. (2001)

Psychophysical experiment: detect which image contains a winding contour:

Performance could be predicted by assuming observers uses the statistics of the natural world

Page 11: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Theories of Object Recognition

• Template matching models• Marr’s theory• Recognition-by-components

Page 12: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Some Challenges for Object Recognition Theories

• The binding problem: binding different features (color, orientation, etc) to yield a unitary percept.

• Bottom-up vs. top-down processing: how much is assumed top-down vs. extracted from the image?

• Viewpoint invariance: a major issue is to recognize objects irrespectively of the viewpoint from which we see them.

Page 13: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Template matching

Detect patterns by matching visual input with a set of templates – see if any template matches.

What about invariance to translation, scaling and rotation? Solution: Find template that best aligns to image (using translation, rotation, scaling)

Page 14: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Figure 2-15 (p. 58)Examples of the letter M.

Problem: template matching is not powerful enough for general object recognition

Page 15: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Marr’s Theory (1982)

1) pixel-based (light intensity)

2) primal sketch (discontinuities in intensity)

3) 2 ½ D sketch (oriented surfaces, relative depth between surfaces)

4) 3D model (shapes, spatial relationships, volumes)

Page 16: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

The hierarchical organisation of the human figure (from Marr & Nishihara, 1978) at various levels: (a) axis of the whole body; (b) axes at the level of arms, legs, and head; (c) arm divided into upper and lower arm; (d) a lower arm with separate hand; and (e) the palm and fingers of a hand.

Page 17: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Biederman’s Recognition-by-

Components Theory

• Adapted from Biederman (1987)

Page 18: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Recognition-by-Components Theory

• Biederman (1987): five invariant properties of edges– Curvature: points on a curve– Parallel: sets of points in parallel– Cotermination: edges terminating at a common

point– Symmetry: versus asymmetry– Collinearity: points sharing a common line

Page 19: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Recognition by Components

• Complex objects are made up of arrangements of basic, component parts: geons.

• “Alphabet” of 36 geons

• Recognition involves recognizing object elements (geons) and their configuration

Page 20: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Why these 36 geons?

• Choice of shape vocabulary seems a bit arbitrary• However, choice of geons was based on non-accidental

properties. The same geon can be recognized across a variety of different perspectives:

except for a few “accidental” views:

Page 21: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Biederman (1987). Participants were presented with degraded line drawings of objects. Recognition was much harder to achieve when parts of the

contour were omitted than when other parts of the contour were deleted. This confirms the assumption that information about concavities is important

for object recognition.

Page 22: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Potential difficulties

Edelman, 1997

A.Structural description not enough, also need metric info

B.Difficult to extract geons from real images

C.Ambiguity in the structural description: most often we have several candidates

D.For some objects, deriving a structural representation can be difficult

Page 23: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Viewpoint-dependent and Viewpoint-invariant Theories

• Biederman (1987). Recognition by components predicts that ease of object recognition is not affected by the observer’s viewpoint if all geons can be identified and their configuration

• However: Tarr (1995), Tarr and Bülthoff (1995, 1998) find that changes in viewpoint often do reduce the speed and/or accuracy of object recognition

Page 24: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Examples of “Greebles”. In the top row, four different “families” are represented. For each family, two members of different “genders” are shown (e.g., Ribu is one gender and Pila is the other). The bottom row shows a new set of Greeble figures constructed on the

same logic but asymmetrical in structure.

Page 25: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Speed of Greeble matching as a function of stage training and difference in orientation between successive Greeble stimuli. Based on data in Gauthier and

Tarr (2002).

Page 26: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Task dependent effects (Vanrie et al. 2002)

invariance condition: features are slighty rotated. This results in view-invariant features

rotation condition: using mirror images. requires mental rotation and viewpoint dependent processes

Non-matching stimuli in same-different task

Page 27: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Speed of performance in (a) the invariance condition and (b) the rotation condition as a function of angular difference and trial type (matching vs. non-matching). Based on data in Vanrie et al. (2002).

Page 28: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Problem for many object recognition theories. How to model role of context? Context can often help in

identification of an object

Later identification of objects is more accurate when object is embedded in coherent context

Page 29: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Context can alter the interpretation of an object

Page 30: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Deficits in Object Recognition

Page 31: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Associative Agnosia

• Failure or deficit in recognizing objects. Patients can draw and copy objects, but cannot recognize them or understand the purpose of some objects

Page 32: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Apperceptive Agnosia

• Inability to integrate features of an object into an overall pattern.

Patients can not distinguish between objects, despite cleardifferences in color and shape.

Page 33: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Prosopagnosia

• Inability to recognize faces

http://www.radicalface.com/mediac/400_0/media/

Page 34: Object Perception. Perceptual Grouping and Gestalt Laws Law of Good continuation. This is perceived as a square and triangle, not as a combination of.

Riddoch and Humphreys (2001).

A hierarchical model of object recognition and naming, specifying different component processes which, when impaired, can producevarieties of apperceptive and associative agnosia.