3 resultados para gestalt

em Chinese Academy of Sciences Institutional Repositories Grid Portal


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Global information is considered the primitive of visual perception in Gestalt psychology. Further, L. Chen ( 2005) proposed a new theory of topological visual perception. According to this theory, the perception of topological difference is faster than o

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Crowding, generally defined as the deleterious influence of nearby contours on visual discrimination, is ubiquitous in spatial vision. Specifically, long-range effects of non-overlapping distracters can alter the appearance of an object, making it unrecognizable. Theories in many domains, including vision computation and high-level attention, have been proposed to account for crowding. However, neither compulsory averaging model nor insufficient spatial esolution of attention provides an adequate explanation for crowding. The present study examined the effects of perceptual organization on crowding. We hypothesize that target-distractor segmentation in crowding is analogous to figure-ground segregation in Gestalt. When distractors can be grouped as a whole or when they are similar to each other but different from the target, the target can be distinguished from distractors. However, grouping target and distractors together by Gestalt principles may interfere with target-distractor separation. Six experiments were carried out to assess our theory. In experiments 1, 2, and 3, we manipulated the similarity between target and distractor as well as the configuration of distractors to investigate the effects of stimuli-driven grouping on target-distractor segmentation. In experiments 4, 5, and 6, we focused on the interaction between bottom-up and top-down processes of grouping, and their influences on target-distractor segmentation. Our results demonstrated that: (a) when distractors were similar to each other but different from target, crowding was eased; (b) when distractors formed a subjective contour or were placed regularly, crowding was also reduced; (c) both bottom-up and top-down processes could influence target-distractor grouping, mediating the effects of crowding. These results support our hypothesis that the figure-ground segregation and target-distractor segmentation in crowding may share similar processes. The present study not only provides a novel explanation for crowding, but also examines the processing bottleneck in object recognition. These findings have significant implications on computer vision and interface design as well as on clinical practice in amblyopia and dyslexia.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Two major questions in this study are the development of children's representative drawing and the influence of semantic representation and image representation on it. Children aged from 3 and a half to 7 participated the experiments. Two-dimension and three-dimension displays were used in four experiments. The results show that: The development of children's representational drawing can be divided into stages. They become maturer in selecting the strategies of the representational drawing, which are different in nature across different ages. There is a development from feature processing to integrative processing in children's drawing. At the feature processing stage, the typological features are represented easily. No matter global or partial. They tend to use unconnected parts to represent, which is called the strategy of distributed representation, those displays without prominent features. In integrative processing stage, the features of two-dimension display are integrated according to its gestalt. And the features of three-dimension display are integrated by its prototypical view across the main axis of the display. Cubic representations were found in some of the children's drawings, but none of them can do it from a perspective view before 7 years old. The semantic processing of the display, both global and partial meaning, can influence the development of the representational drawing. The structural features of the display influence the development of drawing representation. Semantic principles and structural features influence the representational drawings together. For three-dimension display, the semantic face and structural face coexist and work together. Children's ability to draw the display according to the right perspective rather than the prototypical view increase along with them growing up.