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1.
Psychol Methods ; 2024 Apr 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38573668

RESUMO

Human decision behavior entails a graded awareness of its certainty, known as a feeling of confidence. Until now, considerable interest has been paid to behavioral and computational dissociations of decision and confidence, which has raised an urgent need for measurement frameworks that can quantify the efficiency of confidence rating relative to decision accuracy (metacognitive efficiency). As a unique addition to such frameworks, we have developed a new signal detection theory paradigm utilizing the generalized Gaussian distribution (GGSDT). This framework evaluates the observer's metacognitive efficiency and internal standard deviation ratio through shape and scale parameters, respectively. The shape parameter quantifies the kurtosis of internal distributions and can practically be understood in reference to the proportion of the Gaussian ideal observer's confidence being disrupted with random guessing (metacognitive lapse rate). This interpretation holds largely irrespective of the contaminating effects of decision accuracy or operating characteristic asymmetry. Thus, the GGSDT enables hitherto unexplored research protocols (e.g., direct comparison of yes/no vs. forced-choice metacognitive efficiency), expected to find applications in various fields of behavioral science. This article provides a detailed walkthrough of the GGSDT analysis with an accompanying R package (ggsdt). (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

2.
Adv Mar Biol ; 96: 25-37, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37980127

RESUMO

The two Kogia species, the pygmy sperm whale (K. breviceps) and the dwarf sperm whale (K. sima), have similar morphological and biological features as well as diets. Both species are deep divers, and both have wide distributions from tropical to warm-temperate zones. Although K. breviceps is larger than K. sima, there are few reports of habitat differentiation between the two species. The distribution of K. breviceps is concentrated in higher-latitudes, and this species dives deeper than K. sima. We investigated whether these two species differ in their population structures in the western North Pacific. Using stranded specimens from Japan, we compared the population genetic patterns of the two Kogia species using mtDNA control region variation (941 bp). In total, 34 K. breviceps samples and 54 K. sima samples from stranded individuals around Japan were successfully sequenced. Thirty haplotypes were detected in K. breviceps and 34 in K. sima, indicating high genetic diversity for both. Almost all these haplotypes are unique to the western North Pacific, but did not constitute distinct phylogeographic clades within either species. We detected differences between the species in the shape of haplotype networks and in the potential time of population expansion, indicating that the western North Pacific population of the two biologically similar species could have different population demographies. This may reflect differences in evolutionary histories and in the details of their ecological niches.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Baleias , Humanos , Animais , Baleias/genética , Ecossistema , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Estruturas Genéticas , Variação Genética
3.
iScience ; 26(12): 108307, 2023 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38025782

RESUMO

The neural and computational mechanisms underlying visual motion perception have been extensively investigated over several decades, but little attempt has been made to measure and analyze, how human observers perceive the map of motion vectors, or optical flow, in complex naturalistic scenes. Here, we developed a psychophysical method to assess human-perceived motion flows using local vector matching and a flash probe. The estimated perceived flow for naturalistic movies agreed with the physically correct flow (ground truth) at many points, but also showed consistent deviations from the ground truth (flow illusions) at other points. Comparisons with the predictions of various computational models, including cutting-edge computer vision algorithms and coordinate transformation models, indicated that some flow illusions are attributable to lower-level factors such as spatiotemporal pooling and signal loss, while others reflect higher-level computations, including vector decomposition. Our study demonstrates a promising data-driven psychophysical paradigm for an advanced understanding of visual motion perception.

4.
J Vis ; 23(12): 5, 2023 10 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37856108

RESUMO

To encode binocular disparity, the visual system uses a pair of left eye and right eye bandpass filters with either a position or a phase offset between them. Such pairs are considered to exit at multiple scales to encode a wide range of disparity. However, local disparity measurements by bandpass mechanisms can be ambiguous, particularly when the actual disparity is larger than a half-cycle of the preferred spatial frequency of the filter, which often occurs in fine scales. In this study, we investigated whether the visual system uses a coarse-to-fine interaction to resolve this ambiguity at finer scales for depth estimation from disparity. The stimuli were stereo grating patches composed of a target and comparison patterns. The target patterns contained spatial frequencies of 1 and 4 cycles per degree (cpd). The phase disparity of the low-frequency component was 0° (at the horopter), -90° (uncrossed), or 90° (crossed), and that of the high-frequency components was changed independent of the low-frequency disparity, in the range between -90° (uncrossed) and 90° (crossed). The observers' task was to indicate whether the target appeared closer to the comparison pattern, which always shared the disparity with the low-frequency component of the target. Regardless of whether the comparison pattern was a 1-cpd + 4-cpd compound or a 1-cpd simple grating, the perceived depth order of the target and the comparison varied in accordance with the phase disparity of the high-frequency component of the target. This effect occurred not only when the low-frequency component was at the horopter, but also when it contained a large disparity corresponding to one cycle of the high-frequency component (±90°). Our findings suggest a coarse-to-fine interaction in multiscale disparity processing, in which the depth interpretation of the high-frequency changes based on the disparity of the low-frequency component.


Assuntos
Percepção de Profundidade , Disparidade Visual , Humanos , Visão Binocular
5.
Front Psychol ; 14: 1047694, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36874839

RESUMO

It has been suggested that perceiving blurry images in addition to sharp images contributes to the development of robust human visual processing. To computationally investigate the effect of exposure to blurry images, we trained convolutional neural networks (CNNs) on ImageNet object recognition with a variety of combinations of sharp and blurred images. In agreement with recent reports, mixed training on blurred and sharp images (B+S training) brings CNNs closer to humans with respect to robust object recognition against a change in image blur. B+S training also slightly reduces the texture bias of CNNs in recognition of shape-texture cue conflict images, but the effect is not strong enough to achieve human-level shape bias. Other tests also suggest that B+S training cannot produce robust human-like object recognition based on global configuration features. Using representational similarity analysis and zero-shot transfer learning, we also show that B+S-Net does not facilitate blur-robust object recognition through separate specialized sub-networks, one network for sharp images and another for blurry images, but through a single network analyzing image features common across sharp and blurry images. However, blur training alone does not automatically create a mechanism like the human brain in which sub-band information is integrated into a common representation. Our analysis suggests that experience with blurred images may help the human brain recognize objects in blurred images, but that alone does not lead to robust, human-like object recognition.

6.
J Vis ; 22(10): 18, 2022 09 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36149676

RESUMO

Theories of visual confidence have largely been grounded in the gaussian signal detection framework. This framework is so dominant that idiosyncratic consequences from this distributional assumption have remained unappreciated. This article reports systematic comparisons of the gaussian signal detection framework to its logistic counterpart in the measurement of metacognitive accuracy. Because of the difference in their distribution kurtosis, these frameworks are found to provide different perspectives regarding the efficiency of confidence rating relative to objective decision (the logistic model intrinsically gives greater meta-d'/d' ratio than the gaussian model). These frameworks can also provide opposing conclusions regarding the metacognitive inefficiency along the internal evidence continuum (whether meta-d' is larger or smaller for higher levels of confidence). Previous theories developed on these lines of analysis may need to be revisited as the gaussian and logistic metacognitive models received somewhat equivalent support in our quantitative model comparisons. Despite these discrepancies, however, we found that across-condition or across-participant comparisons of metacognitive measures are relatively robust against the distributional assumptions, which provides much assurance to conventional research practice. We hope this article promotes the awareness for the significance of hidden modeling assumptions, contributing to the cumulative development of the relevant field.


Assuntos
Metacognição , Humanos , Modelos Logísticos
7.
J Vis ; 22(2): 17, 2022 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35195670

RESUMO

Complex visual processing involved in perceiving the object materials can be better elucidated by taking a variety of research approaches. Sharing stimulus and response data is an effective strategy to make the results of different studies directly comparable and can assist researchers with different backgrounds to jump into the field. Here, we constructed a database containing several sets of material images annotated with visual discrimination performance. We created the material images using physically based computer graphics techniques and conducted psychophysical experiments with them in both laboratory and crowdsourcing settings. The observer's task was to discriminate materials on one of six dimensions (gloss contrast, gloss distinctness of image, translucent vs. opaque, metal vs. plastic, metal vs. glass, and glossy vs. painted). The illumination consistency and object geometry were also varied. We used a nonverbal procedure (an oddity task) applicable for diverse use cases, such as cross-cultural, cross-species, clinical, or developmental studies. Results showed that the material discrimination depended on the illuminations and geometries and that the ability to discriminate the spatial consistency of specular highlights in glossiness perception showed larger individual differences than in other tasks. In addition, analysis of visual features showed that the parameters of higher order color texture statistics can partially, but not completely, explain task performance. The results obtained through crowdsourcing were highly correlated with those obtained in the laboratory, suggesting that our database can be used even when the experimental conditions are not strictly controlled in the laboratory. Several projects using our dataset are underway.


Assuntos
Percepção de Forma , Sensibilidades de Contraste , Percepção de Forma/fisiologia , Humanos , Estimulação Luminosa , Propriedades de Superfície , Percepção Visual/fisiologia
8.
Iperception ; 12(2): 20416695211004620, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33854748

RESUMO

Motion detection is a fundamental sensory function for multiple modalities, including touch, but the mechanisms underlying tactile motion detection are not well understood. While previous findings supported the existence of high-level feature tracking, it remains unclear whether there also exist low-level motion sensing that directly detects a local spatio-temporal correlation in the skin-stimulation pattern. To elucidate this mechanism, we presented, on braille displays, tactile random-dot kinematograms, similar to those widely used in visual motion research, which enables us to independently manipulate feature trackability and various parameters of local motion. We found that a human observer is able to detect the direction of difficult-to-track tactile motions presented to the fingers and palms. In addition, the direction-discrimination performance was better when the stimuli were presented along the fingers than when presented across the fingers. These results indicate that low-level motion sensing, in addition to high-level tracking, contribute to tactile motion perception.

9.
IEEE Trans Haptics ; 14(3): 680-685, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33347414

RESUMO

When sandwiching two moving parallel metallic wires between both hands, one often experiences an unexpected tactile sensation known as the "velvet hand illusion" (VHI). Researchers have revealed the optimal conditions for inducing VHI, while the subjective nature of VHI remains obscure. In this article, we conducted a psychophysical experiment to investigate the quality and magnitude of the illusory sensation felt during VHI. Participants were asked to evaluate the tactile sensation of moving wires by giving tactile adjective and intensity ratings of the illusory sensation. In the same experiment, for the sake of comparison, participants also rated the sensation for various common materials one may encounter in daily life. We found that, as the intensity of the illusory sensation increased, the tactile sensation became softer, wetter, warmer, and more favorable. We also found that, when a strong illusion was reported, the sensation was similar to those for leather and fabrics rather than metallic wire, which suggests that the illusion indeed changes the perceived material category. These findings provide a better characterization of VHI as well as a better understanding of tactile texture perception.


Assuntos
Ilusões , Percepção do Tato , Mãos , Humanos , Tato , Percepção Visual
10.
Front Psychol ; 12: 800657, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35185697

RESUMO

Android robots capable of emotional interactions with humans have considerable potential for application to research. While several studies developed androids that can exhibit human-like emotional facial expressions, few have empirically validated androids' facial expressions. To investigate this issue, we developed an android head called Nikola based on human psychology and conducted three studies to test the validity of its facial expressions. In Study 1, Nikola produced single facial actions, which were evaluated in accordance with the Facial Action Coding System. The results showed that 17 action units were appropriately produced. In Study 2, Nikola produced the prototypical facial expressions for six basic emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise), and naïve participants labeled photographs of the expressions. The recognition accuracy of all emotions was higher than chance level. In Study 3, Nikola produced dynamic facial expressions for six basic emotions at four different speeds, and naïve participants evaluated the naturalness of the speed of each expression. The effect of speed differed across emotions, as in previous studies of human expressions. These data validate the spatial and temporal patterns of Nikola's emotional facial expressions, and suggest that it may be useful for future psychological studies and real-life applications.

11.
J Vet Med Sci ; 83(1): 146-150, 2021 Jan 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33310996

RESUMO

On a coastline in Miyazaki Prefecture, Japan, a wild subadult female striped dolphin was found dead. Necropsy revealed poor nutritional status and bilateral pneumonia, which was histologically diagnosed as severe suppurative necrotizing bronchopneumonia. Special staining detected numerous intralesional filamentous, branching bacteria, which was identified as Nocardia cyriacigeorgica by sequencing of 16S ribosomal RNA and gyrB genes. Other main histological findings included lymphoid depletion in the spleen and superficial cervical and pulmonary lymph nodes. Suppurative nocardiosis without a granulomatous reaction is uncommon, and it is assumed its pathogenesis was related to the host's immune status. This paper discusses the variable inflammatory response to nocardiosis and describes the first case of N. cyriacigeorgica infection in a wild striped dolphin in Japan.


Assuntos
Broncopneumonia , Nocardiose , Nocardia , Stenella , Animais , Broncopneumonia/veterinária , Feminino , Japão , Nocardia/genética , Nocardiose/veterinária
12.
Sensors (Basel) ; 20(17)2020 Aug 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32825762

RESUMO

Various dry electroencephalography (EEG) electrodes have been developed. Dry EEG electrodes need to be pressed onto the scalp; therefore, there is a tradeoff between keeping the contact impedance low and maintaining comfort. We propose an approach to solve this tradeoff through the printing of complex-shaped electrodes by using a stereolithography 3D printer. To show the feasibility of our approach, we fabricated electrodes that have flexible fingers (prongs) with springs. Although dry electrodes with flexible prongs have been proposed, a suitable spring constant has not been obtained. In this study, the spring constant of our electrodes was determined from a contact model between the electrodes and the scalp. The mechanical properties and reproductivity of the electrodes were found to be sufficient. Finally, we measured the alpha waves when a participant opened/closed his eyes by using our electrodes.


Assuntos
Eletrodos , Eletroencefalografia/instrumentação , Couro Cabeludo , Impedância Elétrica , Humanos , Impressão Tridimensional
13.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 16(8): e1008018, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32813688

RESUMO

Visually inferring material properties is crucial for many tasks, yet poses significant computational challenges for biological vision. Liquids and gels are particularly challenging due to their extreme variability and complex behaviour. We reasoned that measuring and modelling viscosity perception is a useful case study for identifying general principles of complex visual inferences. In recent years, artificial Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) have yielded breakthroughs in challenging real-world vision tasks. However, to model human vision, the emphasis lies not on best possible performance, but on mimicking the specific pattern of successes and errors humans make. We trained a DNN to estimate the viscosity of liquids using 100.000 simulations depicting liquids with sixteen different viscosities interacting in ten different scenes (stirring, pouring, splashing, etc). We find that a shallow feedforward network trained for only 30 epochs predicts mean observer performance better than most individual observers. This is the first successful image-computable model of human viscosity perception. Further training improved accuracy, but predicted human perception less well. We analysed the network's features using representational similarity analysis (RSA) and a range of image descriptors (e.g. optic flow, colour saturation, GIST). This revealed clusters of units sensitive to specific classes of feature. We also find a distinct population of units that are poorly explained by hand-engineered features, but which are particularly important both for physical viscosity estimation, and for the specific pattern of human responses. The final layers represent many distinct stimulus characteristics-not just viscosity, which the network was trained on. Retraining the fully-connected layer with a reduced number of units achieves practically identical performance, but results in representations focused on viscosity, suggesting that network capacity is a crucial parameter determining whether artificial or biological neural networks use distributed vs. localized representations.


Assuntos
Modelos Neurológicos , Redes Neurais de Computação , Viscosidade , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Adulto , Biologia Computacional , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
14.
Iperception ; 11(3): 2041669520937320, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32647561

RESUMO

Many studies have investigated various effects of smooth pursuit on visual motion processing, especially the effects related to the additional retinal shifts produced by eye movement. In this article, we show that the perception of apparent motion during smooth pursuit is determined by the interelement proximity in retinal coordinates and also by the proximity in objective world coordinates. In Experiment 1, we investigated the perceived direction of the two-frame apparent motion of a square-wave grating with various displacement sizes under fixation and pursuit viewing conditions. The retinal and objective displacements between the two frames agreed with each other under the fixation condition. However, the displacements differed by 180 degrees in terms of phase shift, under the pursuit condition. The proportions of the reported motion direction between the two viewing conditions did not coincide when they were plotted as a function of either the retinal displacement or of the objective displacement; however, they did coincide when plotted as a function of a mixture of the two. The result from Experiment 2 showed that the perceived jump size of the apparent motion was also dependent on both retinal and objective displacements. Our findings suggest that the detection of the apparent motion during smooth pursuit considers the retinal proximity and also the objective proximity. This mechanism may assist with the selection of a motion path that is more likely to occur in the real world and, therefore, be useful for ensuring perceptual stability during smooth pursuit.

15.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 8576, 2020 05 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32444700

RESUMO

The Japanese murrelet (Synthliboramphus wumizusume) is an endangered small seabird species in Japan. Molecular sexing using PCR targeting of the gene encoding chromodomain helicase DNA-binding protein 1(CHD1) has been used for sex identification. Specifically, PCR using any of three commonly used primer sets (CHD1F/1R, 2550F/2718R and P2/P8) has permitted sexing in many bird species. CHD1F/1R and 2550F/2718R permitted molecular sexing in Japanese murrelet; however, P2/P8 did not permit. To generate a primer pair that permits efficient molecular sexing in this species, a new primer set, CHD1F1/1R1, was prepared to permit amplification of smaller products from degraded DNA samples. The electrophoretic patterns of PCR products amplified with the new primer set were easily classified as female or male. Additionally, the PCR product indicated the presence of a polymorphism in the fragment from chromosome W. The PCR fragments of long-type (WL) and short-type (WS) polymorphisms were observed only in females. When the distribution of the CHD1 gene on chromosome W of 61 female Japanese murrelet on Biroujima Island in Miyazaki Prefecture, WL and WS were observed in 90.2% and 9.8%. The DNA polymorphism is derived from the number of copies of a 32-bp-repeat unit, with WL and WS corresponding to two and one 32-bp-repeats, respectively.


Assuntos
Charadriiformes/genética , Polimorfismo Genético , Cromossomos Sexuais/genética , Sequências de Repetição em Tandem/genética , Animais , Espécies em Perigo de Extinção , Feminino , Masculino , Análise para Determinação do Sexo
16.
IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph ; 25(5): 2061-2071, 2019 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30794177

RESUMO

A recently developed light projection technique can add dynamic impressions to static real objects without changing their original visual attributes such as surface colors and textures. It produces illusory motion impressions in the projection target by projecting gray-scale motion-inducer patterns that selectively drive the motion detectors in the human visual system. Since a compelling illusory motion can be produced by an inducer pattern weaker than necessary to perfectly reproduce the shift of the original pattern on an object's surface, the technique works well under bright environmental light conditions. However, determining the best deformation sizes is often difficult: When users try to add a large deformation, the deviation in the projected patterns from the original surface pattern on the target object becomes apparent. Therefore, to obtain satisfactory results, they have to spend much time and effort to manually adjust the shift sizes. Here, to overcome this limitation, we propose an optimization framework that adaptively retargets the displacement vectors based on a perceptual model. The perceptual model predicts the subjective inconsistency between a projected pattern and an original one by simulating responses in the human visual system. The displacement vectors are adaptively optimized so that the projection effect is maximized within the tolerable range predicted by the model. We extensively evaluated the perceptual model and optimization method through a psychophysical experiment as well as user studies.


Assuntos
Gráficos por Computador , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Realidade Virtual , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Humanos , Luz , Psicofísica
17.
J Vis ; 18(8): 3, 2018 08 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30098175

RESUMO

Dynamic image deformation produces the perception of a transparent material that appears to deform the background image by light refraction. Since past studies on this phenomenon have mainly used subjective judgment about the presence of a transparent layer, it remains unsolved whether this is a real perceptual transparency effect in the sense that it forms surface representations, as do conventional transparency effects. Visual computation for color and luminance transparency, induced mainly by surface-contour information, can be decomposed into two components: surface formation to determine foreground and background layers, and scission to assign color and luminance to each layer. Here we show that deformation-induced perceptual transparency aids surface formation by color transparency and consequently resolves color scission. We asked observers to report the color of the front layer in a spatial region with a neutral physical color. The layer color could be seen as either reddish or greenish depending on the spatial context producing the color transparency, which was, however, ambiguous about the order of layers. We found that adding to the display a deformation-induced transparency that could specify the front layer significantly biased color scission in the predicted way if and only if the deformation-induced transparency was spatially coincident with the interpretation of color transparency. The results indicate that deformation-induced transparency is indeed a novel type of perceptual transparency that plays a role in surface formation in cooperation with color transparency.


Assuntos
Percepção de Cores/fisiologia , Percepção de Forma/fisiologia , Distorção da Percepção/fisiologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Visão Ocular
18.
Annu Rev Vis Sci ; 4: 501-523, 2018 09 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30052495

RESUMO

Visual motion processing can be conceptually divided into two levels. In the lower level, local motion signals are detected by spatiotemporal-frequency-selective sensors and then integrated into a motion vector flow. Although the model based on V1-MT physiology provides a good computational framework for this level of processing, it needs to be updated to fully explain psychophysical findings about motion perception, including complex motion signal interactions in the spatiotemporal-frequency and space domains. In the higher level, the velocity map is interpreted. Although there are many motion interpretation processes, we highlight the recent progress in research on the perception of material (e.g., specular reflection, liquid viscosity) and on animacy perception. We then consider possible linking mechanisms of the two levels and propose intrinsic flow decomposition as the key problem. To provide insights into computational mechanisms of motion perception, in addition to psychophysics and neurosciences, we review machine vision studies seeking to solve similar problems.


Assuntos
Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Retroalimentação Sensorial/fisiologia , Humanos , Psicofísica , Transdução de Sinais/fisiologia , Percepção Espacial/fisiologia , Percepção do Tempo/fisiologia
19.
IEEE Trans Haptics ; 11(2): 192-203, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29911978

RESUMO

When we acquire tactile information about an object's surface, we actively move our hands. Past studies have shown a correlation between participants' (i.e., touchers') hand motion in tactile exploration and the evaluated tactile attributes of the object, which suggests that tactile perception can be estimated from statistical analysis of touchers' hand motion. Though it has been reported that the statistical analysis of hand motion can indeed estimate tactile perception, whether humans can estimate tactile perception by observing the hand motion of others remains unclear. To investigate this, we conducted experiments wherein observers watched point-light moving hands of touchers in tactile exploration and evaluated the material being touched. Our results show that, although observers' estimation of touchers' perception was not accurate, observers extracted information from touchers' hand motion for estimation, and the correlations within observers' estimation were high. These results suggest that human observers can estimate tactile perception through visual observation of the hand motion of others by adopting common strategies about the relationships between touchers' hand motion and tactile perception.


Assuntos
Mãos/fisiologia , Atividade Motora/fisiologia , Movimento/fisiologia , Percepção do Tato/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Adulto Jovem
20.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 14(4): e1006061, 2018 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29702644

RESUMO

Visual estimation of the material and shape of an object from a single image includes a hard ill-posed computational problem. However, in our daily life we feel we can estimate both reasonably well. The neural computation underlying this ability remains poorly understood. Here we propose that the human visual system uses different aspects of object images to separately estimate the contributions of the material and shape. Specifically, material perception relies mainly on the intensity gradient magnitude information, while shape perception relies mainly on the intensity gradient order information. A clue to this hypothesis was provided by the observation that luminance-histogram manipulation, which changes luminance gradient magnitudes but not the luminance-order map, effectively alters the material appearance but not the shape of an object. In agreement with this observation, we found that the simulated physical material changes do not significantly affect the intensity order information. A series of psychophysical experiments further indicate that human surface shape perception is robust against intensity manipulations provided they do not disturb the intensity order information. In addition, we show that the two types of gradient information can be utilized for the discrimination of albedo changes from highlights. These findings suggest that the visual system relies on these diagnostic image features to estimate physical properties in a distal world.


Assuntos
Percepção de Forma/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Biologia Computacional , Simulação por Computador , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Modelos Neurológicos , Modelos Psicológicos , Estimulação Luminosa , Psicofísica , Propriedades de Superfície
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