6533b852fe1ef96bd12aae9b
RESEARCH PRODUCT
RESOLVING AMBIGUITIES IN ORIENTATION, MOTION, AND DEPTH DOMAINS
Jüri Alliksubject
MaleVision Disparitymedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)Luminance050105 experimental psychologyMotion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArtificial IntelligenceOrientationPerceptionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGlobal structuremedia_commonDepth PerceptionCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesSpace perceptionPattern recognitionAmbiguityPerceptual salienceSensory SystemsOphthalmologyPattern Recognition VisualStimulus luminanceSpace PerceptionVisual PerceptionFemaleArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Three different perceptual systems—orientation, motion, and depth—can recover a global perceptual organization from spatially correlated random multielement patterns. In all three cases the global structure composed of random elements is evaluated by mechanisms performing measurements in the energy domain within appropriately defined local space—time areas. The selective increase in energy of one fraction of the elements may dramatically change the whole perceptual organization of the stimulus. In specially devised patterns one and the same element can belong to two or more separate perceptual organizations, the perceptual salience of one of which can be reinforced by a luminance increment of the elements comprising it. If a stimulus provides two different perceptual organizations to which each element could potentially belong, one of four possible solutions of the existing ambiguity will occur: suppression, rivalry, mixture, or parity. Two superimposed global orientation patterns either suppress or dominate over each other but cannot be seen simultaneously or in a mixed form. Characteristic of the depth system is that it allows multiple binocular matchings and parity of possible perceptual solutions. Finally, if a stimulus provides two or more paths along which each element may appear to move, the perceived global motion direction is determined by a mixture of directions of these competing motion paths. Dissimilarities in these ways of resolving ambiguities may be based on different principles defining regularity and coherence of an object in the orientation, motion, and depth domains.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1992-12-01 |