Shape Processing in Perceptual Decisions of Detection, Identification, and Categorization
Shape Processing in Perceptual Decisions of Detection, Identification, and Categorization
Blog Article
With three tasks, it was investigated what kind of shape information was involved in the visual object processing in perceptual decisions, such as detection, identification and categorization.Stimuli taken from Snodgrass and Vanderwart (1980) were modified with different levels of random noise.In the detection task, a modified line-drawing object (target) and a lure of random noise (non-target) were sequentially presented in random order.Observers were asked to choose which stimulus was the target.
Detection thresholds (the level of random noise to Mielczewski czy Leszczyński, czyli kto skomponował „Missa cum Credo per octavas” detect target) were measured.In the identification task, an object description of the target was given before two modified line-drawing objects were presented.Observers were asked to choose the target.The procedure Spatial dynamics of urban populations of Lutzomyia longipalpis (Diptera: Psychodidae) in Caxias, State of Maranhão, Brazil of the categorization task was almost identical to that of the identification task except that the object description was replaced with the category name.
Accuracies were calculated in the last two tasks.The results of correlation analyses between the measurements and the shape-variables (e.g., the number of edges, the degree of the circularity or visual complexity) indicated that detection was related to the perception of the local edge, identification involved complexity of shape, and categorization depended on edge detection.