Title: Form Perception
1Form Perception
- Perceptual Organization
- and
- Perceptual Phenomena
2Perceptual Organization
- From Gestalt psychology c1930
- Law of Prägnanz (good configuration)
- Wertheimer 1958 -- laws of grouping
- Grouping laws are corollaries to Prägnanz
- Not much explanation given for these -- Gestalt
theorists like to think they are innate - Opponents like to argue that its all learned
3The Grouping Laws
- Proximity
- Similarity
- Orientation
- Closure
- Good continuation
- Common Fate
- Familiarity
4Proximity
- The visual system groups things which are close
together
5Similarity
- Objects of similar shape, intensity, or color are
grouped together
O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O
O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O
O O V V O O V V O O V V O O V V O O V V O O V V O
O V V O O
6Orientation
- The visual system groups items with common
orientation
7Closure
- We tend to fill out incomplete details to form
good figures
8Good Continuation
- The visual system prefers C1 continuity
Figure
Preferred interpretation
Other possible interpretation
9Common Fate
- Items with common motion are readily grouped
Example Hidden Birdie
10Familiarity
- You will undoubtedly see more than random specs
in this picture below due to your familiarity
with the subject.
11Familiarity
- but this probably looks pretty random to most of
you
12Familiarity (or lack thereof)
- The word recognition in Chinese characters
13Modern Theories
- Fourier based
- Campbell Robinson 1968
- Autocorrelation
- Uttal 1975
- Network models
- Grossberg 1976, Leake and Anninos 1976, Sejnowski
1976 - Texons
- Julesz 1965, 1975, 1981
From Caelli, Terry. Visual Perception Theory
and Practice, Pergamon Press, 1981
14Form Phenomena
- Müller-Lyer
- Horizontal-Vertical
- Poggendorf
- Titchener
- Kanisza
- Ouchi
- Baxter-Harris??
- Adaptation examples
15Müller-Lyer (1889)
16Müller-Lyer Explained
- In first version, perspective is common
explanation - In second, we need a different explanation
- Feedback from eye scanning back and forth?
- Nope. Lines presented tachistoscopically (really
fast) still exhibit effect. - Interpreting whitespace as part of line?
- Many other theories have been proposed...
17Horizontal-Vertical
18Horizontal-Vertical Explained
- The bisection is important -- no illusion if
segments joined at endpoints. ( i.e. _ ) - Some say illusion only works with bisector
horizontal (works either way for me, though) - Largest effect is actually for a line 20 off the
vertical (Cormack Cormack 1974) - Perspective effect? (Kunnapas 1957)
- Greater length of horizontal FOV vs vertical?
19Titchener
Art Bob Ausbourne
20Titchener Explained
- Brain accentuates contrasts
- Small dot among big dots becomes smaller
- Big dot among small dots becomes bigger
21Poggendorf (1860)
Interactive Demo
22Poggendorf Explained
- Blakemore (1973) attributes this to "tilt
contrast," caused by lateral inhibition between
neural signals of orientation, which will expand
the appearance of acute angles. - Explains some other illusions
- But doesnt explain Poggendorf adequately
- No effect with just acute angles
- but do get it with just obtuse angles
23Kanisza (1979)
- How many triangles?
- Illusory contours a.k.a. subjective contours
24Kanisza Explained
- Gestalt dudes say simplelaw of Prägnanz
- Simplest interpretation is a white triangle
occluding simple geometric figures.
25Ouchi
The effect may be heightened if you read these
words while paying attention to what is happening
with the circle in your peripheral vision
26Ouchi Explained
- Inset perceived as being at different depth?
- a failure to integrate two motion signals into a
single motion vector which characterises rigid
motion (Hine, Cook, and Rogers 1995 p. 3093) - An artifact of biased flow estimation
(Fermüller, Pless and Aloimonos 1998)
http//www.cfar.umd.edu./ftp/TRs/CVL-Reports-1998/
TR3917-fermuller.ps.gz
27Baxter-Harris??
- Note the black rectangular outline of the figure.
28Baxter-Harris Explained
- Scientists are baffled by this latest discovery.
29Adaptation to Intensity
30Disappearing Blobs Explained
- Normally saccades keep edges alive
- With gentle intensity gradient, though, saccades
are not large enough to re-trigger edge detectors
31Adaptation to Frequency
32Adaptation to Frequency
Response from frequency detectors for a pattern
of particular frequency
-
Looking at a high freq pattern causes these
detectors to fire with the strength indicated
Normally looking at a medium freq pattern would
result in this response
But the high freq detectors are tired and dont
fire as much as usual. So you perceive a lower
frequency than actual
33Face Recognition
- Neonates of lt 1yr can do it
- Special face cells in cortex for it
- Studies of prosopagnosic patients revealing
- Identity, familiarity, expression, sex all
processed separately in parallel - Faces seem to be stored as diffs off of a
prototype, but using what bases?
From Bruce (Ed.), Face Recognition a special
issue of the European Journal of Cognitive
Psychology, 1991
34Face Recognition
- You might recognize this face
- Often as few as 18 pixels is enough to identify a
face - Monkey face cells fire for both high- and
low-pass filtered faces
35Bibliography
- IllusionWorks http//www.illusionworks.com
- The Joy of Visual Perception http//www.yorku.ca/e
ye/ - Sandlot Science http//www.lainet.com/ausbourn/
- UIUC Internet Psych Lab, Visual Perception
http//kahuna.cogsci.uiuc.edu/ipl/vis/level_2_vis.
html - MIT Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science
http//mitpress.mit.edu/MITECS/ - Wientraub Walker, Perception, Wadsworth
Publishing Co, Belmont,CA. 1966
36Bonus rule of thumb
- The fovea covers only about 2 of visual angle
roughly the area of the thumbnail at arms length.
From Churchland and Ramachandran, Perception
(Atkins, Ed.), Oxford Univ. Press, 1996
37Sean Ho is next with more form perception...
Stay tuned!