Category-specific learned attentional bias to object parts

被引:0
|
作者
Kao-Wei Chua
Isabel Gauthier
机构
[1] Vanderbilt University,Department of Psychology
来源
关键词
Learned attention; Probability cuing; Attention in complex objects;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Humans can selectively attend to information in visual scenes. Learning from previous experiences plays a role in how visual attention is subsequently deployed. For example, visual search times are faster in areas that are statistically more likely to contain a target (Jiang and Swallow in Cognition, 126(3), 378–390, 2013). Here, we examined whether similar attentional biases can be created for different locations on complex objects as a function of their category, based on a history of these locations containing a target. Subjects performed a visual search task in the context of novel objects called Greebles. The target appeared in one half (e.g., top) of the Greebles 89 % of the time and in the other half (e.g., bottom) 11 % of the time. We found a reaction time advantage when the target was located in a “target-rich” region, even after target location probabilities were equated. This indicates that attentional biases can be associated not only with regions of space but also with specific object features, or at least with locations in an object-based frame of reference.
引用
收藏
页码:44 / 51
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Category-specific learned attentional bias to object parts
    Chua, Kao-Wei
    Gauthier, Isabel
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2016, 78 (01) : 44 - 51
  • [2] Category-Specific Object Image Denoising
    Anwar, Saeed
    Porikli, Fatih
    Cong Phuoc Huynh
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING, 2017, 26 (11) : 5506 - 5518
  • [3] Category-specific comprehension deficit restricted to body parts
    Suzuki, K
    Yamadori, A
    Fujii, T
    NEUROCASE, 1997, 3 (03) : 193 - 200
  • [4] Generalisation of value-based attentional priority is category-specific
    Clement, Andrew
    Gregoire, Laurent
    Anderson, Brian A.
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, : 2401 - 2409
  • [5] Spatiotemporal dynamics of early spatial and category-specific attentional modulations
    Ioannides, Andreas A.
    Poghosyan, Vahe
    NEUROIMAGE, 2012, 60 (03) : 1638 - 1651
  • [6] Category-specific effects in object identification:: What is "normal"?
    Låg, T
    CORTEX, 2005, 41 (06) : 833 - 841
  • [7] Category-Specific Object Reconstruction from a Single Image
    Kar, Abhishek
    Tulsiani, Shubham
    Carreira, Joao
    Malik, Jitendra
    2015 IEEE CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION (CVPR), 2015, : 1966 - 1974
  • [8] The anatomy of category-specific object naming in neurodegenerative diseases
    Brambati, S. M.
    Myers, D.
    Wilson, A.
    Rankin, K. P.
    Allison, S. C.
    Rosen, H. J.
    Miller, B. L.
    Gorno-Tempini, M. L.
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 18 (10) : 1644 - 1653
  • [9] On the face of it, can we object to category-specific vision?
    Puce, A
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2000, 37 : S4 - S4
  • [10] Category-specific object segmentation via unsupervised discriminant shape
    Dai, Lingzheng
    Yang, Jian
    Chen, Liang
    Li, Junxia
    PATTERN RECOGNITION, 2017, 64 : 202 - 214