Liu Z, Jacobs D W, Basri R
Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ 07102, USA.
Vision Res. 1999;39(25):4244-57. doi: 10.1016/s0042-6989(99)00141-8.
Since the seminal work of the Gestalt psychologists, there has been great interest in understanding what factors determine the perceptual organization of images. While the Gestaltists demonstrated the significance of grouping cues such as similarity, proximity and good continuation, it has not been well understood whether their catalog of grouping cues is complete--in part due to the paucity of effective methodologies for examining the significance of various grouping cues. We describe a novel, objective method to study perceptual grouping of planar regions separated by an occluder. We demonstrate that the stronger the grouping between two such regions, the harder it will be to resolve their relative stereoscopic depth. We use this new method to call into question many existing theories of perceptual completion (Ullman, S. (1976). Biological Cybernetics, 25, 1-6; Shashua, A., & Ullman, S. (1988). 2nd International Conference on Computer Vision (pp. 321-327); Parent, P., & Zucker, S. (1989). IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, 11, 823-839; Kellman, P. J., & Shipley, T. F. (1991). Cognitive psychology, Liveright, New York; Heitger, R., & von der Heydt, R. (1993). A computational model of neural contour processing, figure-ground segregation and illusory contours. In Internal Conference Computer Vision (pp. 32-40); Mumford, D. (1994). Algebraic geometry and its applications, Springer, New York; Williams, L. R., & Jacobs, D. W. (1997). Neural Computation, 9, 837-858) that are based on Gestalt grouping cues by demonstrating that convexity plays a strong role in perceptual completion. In some cases convexity dominates the effects of the well known Gestalt cue of good continuation. While convexity has been known to play a role in figure/ground segmentation (Rubin, 1927; Kanizsa & Gerbino, 1976), this is the first demonstration of its importance in perceptual completion.
自格式塔心理学家的开创性工作以来,人们对理解哪些因素决定图像的感知组织产生了浓厚兴趣。虽然格式塔学派证明了诸如相似性、接近性和良好连续性等分组线索的重要性,但他们的分组线索目录是否完整尚未得到很好的理解——部分原因是缺乏用于检验各种分组线索重要性的有效方法。我们描述了一种新颖的、客观的方法来研究被遮挡物分隔的平面区域的感知分组。我们证明,两个这样的区域之间的分组越强,就越难分辨它们的相对立体深度。我们使用这种新方法对许多现有的基于格式塔分组线索的感知完成理论(乌尔曼,S.(1976年)。《生物控制论》,第25卷,第1 - 6页;沙舒阿,A.,& 乌尔曼,S.(1988年)。第二届国际计算机视觉会议(第321 - 327页);帕伦特,P.,& 朱克,S.(1989年)。《IEEE模式分析与机器智能汇刊》,第11卷,第823 - 839页;凯尔曼,P. J.,& 希普利,T. F.(1991年)。《认知心理学》,利夫赖特出版社,纽约;海特格,R.,& 冯·德·海德特,R.(1993年)。神经轮廓处理、图形 - 背景分离和错觉轮廓的计算模型。在国际计算机视觉会议(第32 - 40页);芒福德,D.(1994年)。《代数几何及其应用》,施普林格出版社,纽约;威廉姆斯,L. R.,& 雅各布斯,D. W.(1997年)。《神经计算》,第9卷,第837 - 858页)提出质疑,通过证明凸性在感知完成中起着重要作用。在某些情况下,凸性主导了著名的格式塔良好连续性线索的效果。虽然已知凸性在图形/背景分割中起作用(鲁宾,1927年;卡尼萨 & 杰尔比诺,1976年),但这是首次证明其在感知完成中的重要性。