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1.
Psychol Sci ; 12(4): 287-92, 2001 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11476094

ABSTRACT

By monitoring subjects' eye movements during a visual search task, we examined the possibility that the mechanism responsible for guiding attention during visual search has no memory for which locations have already been examined. Subjects did reexamine some items during their search, but the pattern of revisitations did notfit the predictions of the memory less search model. In addition, a large proportion of the refixations were directed at the target, suggesting that the revisitations were due to subjects' remembering which items had not been adequately identified. We also examined the patterns of fixations and compared them with the predictions of a memoryless search model Subjects' fixation patterns showed an increasing hazard function, whereas the memoryless model predicts a flat function. Lastly, we found no evidence suggesting that fixations were guided by amnesic covert scans that scouted the environment for new items during fixations. Results do not support the claims of the memorvless search model, and instead suggest that visual search does have memory.


Subject(s)
Memory/physiology , Visual Perception , Adult , Eye Movements/physiology , Female , Fixation, Ocular/physiology , Humans , Male
2.
Percept Psychophys ; 63(2): 195-208, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11281096

ABSTRACT

In four experiments, the effects of sequential priming on the perceptual organization of complex three-dimensional (3-D) displays were examined. Observers were asked to view stereoscopic arrays and to search an embedded subset of items for an odd-colored target while 3-D orientation of the stimuli was varied randomly between trials. Search times decreased reliably when 3-D stimulus orientation was unchanged on consecutive trials, indicating substantial sequential priming by 3-D stimulus layout. The priming was nonsensory and was independent of priming by additional stimulus characteristics. Finally, priming by 3-D layout was unaffected by observers' foreknowledge of display orientation. Results indicate that perceptual organization of 3-D stimuli is guided by a short-term trace of 3-D spatial relationships between stimuli.


Subject(s)
Attention , Color Perception , Depth Perception , Field Dependence-Independence , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Recall , Orientation , Psychophysics
3.
Appl Ergon ; 31(5): 523-30, 2000 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11059466

ABSTRACT

Sensor fusion combines the output of multiple imaging sensors within a single composite display. Ideally, a fused image will retain important spatial information provided by individual input images, and will convey useful spatial or chromatic emergent information derived from the contrast between input images. The present experiment assessed the potential benefits of sensor fusion as a method of enhancing drivers' night-time detection of road hazards. Observers were asked to detect a pedestrian within thermal and visible images of a night-time scene, and within chromatic and achromatic renderings created by sensor fusion of grayscale thermal and visible images. Results indicated that fusion can both improve spatial image content, and can effectively embellish spatial content with emergent chromatic information. The benefits of both sensor fusion and of color rendering, however, were inconsistent, varying substantially with quality of input images submitted for fusion.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/prevention & control , Automobile Driving , Darkness , Vision, Ocular/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Color Perception/physiology , Humans , Male , Photic Stimulation/instrumentation , Photic Stimulation/methods , Prospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity , Vision Tests/instrumentation , Vision Tests/methods , Vision Tests/statistics & numerical data
4.
Percept Psychophys ; 62(3): 540-9, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10909244

ABSTRACT

Attneave (1954) and Barlow (1961) proposed that the visual system might increase efficiency of representation by preferentially encoding spatiotemporally redundant patterns of the external world. The present experiments tested the application of this principle to three-dimensional (3-D) perceptual organization, capitalizing on the ecological constraint that human observers must frequently interact with objects arranged on the ground or on a surface parallel to it (Gibson, 1950). Observers performed a task that required them to perceptually segregate and search multiple items distributed in depth and embedded within a larger, 3-D array of distractors. Stimulus displays were organized to globally recede top-away in depth, as if attached to an underlying ground-like surface, or bottom-away, as if attached to an overhanging ceiling-like surface; ground-like and ceiling-like displays differed only in the direction of disparity gradient within the displays. Primary findings revealed superior performance with ground-like displays, suggesting that spatially and stereoscopically distributed items are more easily organized to represent an ecologically representative pattern, even when no inherent physical regularities favor that pattern.


Subject(s)
Depth Perception , Field Dependence-Independence , Orientation , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Psychophysics , Vision Disparity
5.
Perception ; 29(8): 927-35, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11145084

ABSTRACT

Contrast sensitivity is lower for obliquely oriented achromatic gratings than for vertical or horizontal gratings at high spatial and low temporal frequencies. Although this response is suggestive of mediation by P-pathway cortical correlates, no clear sensory (i.e. class 1) oblique effect has been demonstrated with isoluminant chromatic stimuli. In the present experiment, a two-alternative forced-choice detection task was used to measure observers' sensitivity to spatiotemporal sinusoids varying in orientation and color contrast. A maximum-likelihood method fit ellipses to the thresholds, with the length of each ellipse taken as a measure of chromatic contrast sensitivity at isoluminance, and the width as luminance contrast threshold. A chromatic oblique effect was observed at about 3 cycles deg-1 suggesting an orientation bias within the cortical stream conveying P-cell activity.


Subject(s)
Color Perception , Contrast Sensitivity , Adult , Humans , Male , Photic Stimulation/methods , Psychometrics/methods , Sensory Thresholds
6.
Vision Res ; 39(10): 1847-60, 1999 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10343876

ABSTRACT

We investigated the spatially local factors that adjust the sensitivity of the human visual system within a small patch of visual space. A very small adapting field was varied in diameter to map out the strength and extent of the spatially local processes that adjust sensitivity for both increments and decrements. The results demonstrated antagonistic center/surround adaptation regions with a decremental test probe comparable to those demonstrated previously for incremental probes (Westheimer, G., 1965. Spatial interaction in the human retina during scotopic vision, Journal of Physiology 81, 812-894; Westheimer, G., 1967. Spatial interaction in human cone vision, Journal of Physiology 190, 139-154) implying comparable antagonistic regions in the ON and OFF channels. In addition to spatial interactions based on light adaptation, we report a weaker effect that is based on the location of a border (luminance edge) and is governed by the contrast of this edge. Finally, we show that these effects are elicited by both highly localized edges (1' ring pairs) and radial lines (Ehrenstein figure) as well. We conclude that both a border-contrast mechanism and a net-excitation mechanism govern the spatially local adaptation of the visual system and that this view fits well with the behavior of single units reported previously.


Subject(s)
Form Perception/physiology , Adaptation, Ocular , Adult , Contrast Sensitivity/physiology , Humans , Lighting , Psychophysics , Sensory Thresholds/physiology
7.
Hum Factors ; 41(3): 438-52, 1999 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10665211

ABSTRACT

We investigated human perceptual performance allowed by relatively impoverished information conveyed in nighttime natural scenes. We used images of nighttime outdoor scenes rendered in image-intensified low-light visible (i2) sensors, thermal infrared (ir) sensors, and an i2/ir fusion technique with information added. We found that nighttime imagery provides adequate low-level image information for effective perceptual organization on a classification task, but that performance for exemplars within a given object category is dependent on the image type. Overall performance was best with the false-color fused images. This is consistent with the suggestion in the literature that color plays a predominate role in perceptual grouping and segmenting of objects in a scene and supports the suggestion that the addition of color in complex achromatic scenes aids the perceptual organization required for visual search. In the present study, we address the issue of assessment of perceptual performance with alternative night-vision sensors and fusion methods and begin to characterize perceptual organization abilities permitted by the information in relatively impoverished images of complex scenes. Applications of this research include improving night vision, medical, and other devices that use alternative sensors or degraded imagery.


Subject(s)
Color , Computer Graphics , Dark Adaptation , Visual Perception , Adult , Female , Humans , Infrared Rays , Male
8.
Hum Factors ; 41(4): 553-8, 1999 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10774126

ABSTRACT

Traditionally military aviators have prepared for air-to-ground bombing missions with maps and aerial photographs of their targets. Mission rehearsal systems augment these media by allowing pilots to view simulated ingress to their target, as seen from the cockpit perspective. In the present experiment we assessed the benefits of mission rehearsal with a task requiring observers to view recorded approaches to target objects and to detect the target objects as quickly as possible. Results indicated that premission simulations allowed observers to detect target objects at greater stand-off ranges than did study with maps and aerial photographs alone. Actual or potential applications of this research include the deployment of a mission rehearsal system to assist aviators' mission planning.


Subject(s)
Aviation , Computer Simulation , Military Medicine , Practice, Psychological , Task Performance and Analysis , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Humans , Male , Military Personnel , Models, Theoretical , Reaction Time , United States , Visual Perception
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