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
  • [21] CATEGORY-SPECIFIC IMPAIRMENTS - NO - A CRITIQUE
    PARKIN, AJ
    STEWART, F
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION A-HUMAN EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1993, 46 (03): : 505 - 509
  • [22] Category-Specific Video Summarization
    Potapov, Danila
    Douze, Matthijs
    Harchaoui, Zaid
    Schmid, Cordelia
    COMPUTER VISION - ECCV 2014, PT VI, 2014, 8694 : 540 - 555
  • [23] CATEGORY-SPECIFIC DISORDERS IN APHASIA
    MCCARTHY, RA
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1987, 9 (03) : 269 - 269
  • [24] Category-specific scene categorization
    Su, Songzhi
    Lan, Zongyu
    Chen, Shu-Yuan
    Li, Shaozi
    JOURNAL OF THE CHINESE INSTITUTE OF ENGINEERS, 2015, 38 (01) : 128 - 137
  • [25] The nature of category-specific impairment
    deRenzi, E
    Lucchelli, F
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1996, 55 (01) : 87 - 89
  • [26] CATEGORY-SPECIFIC DEFICITS IN APHASIA
    BERNDT, RS
    APHASIOLOGY, 1988, 2 (3-4) : 237 - 240
  • [27] The interaction of object form and object meaning in the identification performance of a patient with category-specific visual agnosia
    Dixon, M
    Bub, DN
    Arguin, M
    COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1997, 14 (08) : 1085 - 1130
  • [28] Differentiating perceptual and semantic sources of category-specific effects in object categorization.
    Kiefer, M
    Spitzer, M
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1999, : 80 - 80
  • [29] Alzheimer's disease, category-specific impairment and relevant variables in object naming
    Moreno-Martinez, F. J.
    Tallon-Barranco, A.
    Frank-Garcia, A.
    REVISTA DE NEUROLOGIA, 2007, 44 (03) : 129 - 133
  • [30] A functional neuroimaging study of the variables that generate category-specific object processing differences
    Moore, CJ
    Price, CJ
    BRAIN, 1999, 122 : 943 - 962