Riesenhuber Maximilian, Jarudi Izzat, Gilad Sharon, Sinha Pawan
McGovern Institute for Brain Research and Center for Biological and Computational Learning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2004 Dec 7;271 Suppl 6(Suppl 6):S448-50. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2004.0216.
Understanding how the human visual system recognizes objects is one of the key challenges in neuroscience. Inspired by a large body of physiological evidence, a general class of recognition models has emerged, which is based on a hierarchical organization of visual processing, with succeeding stages being sensitive to image features of increasing complexity. However, these models appear to be incompatible with some well-known psychophysical results. Prominent among these are experiments investigating recognition impairments caused by vertical inversion of images, especially those of faces. It has been reported that faces that differ 'featurally' are much easier to distinguish when inverted than those that differ 'configurally'; a finding that is difficult to reconcile with the physiological models. Here, we show that after controlling for subjects' expectations, there is no difference between 'featurally' and 'configurally' transformed faces in terms of inversion effect. This result reinforces the plausibility of simple hierarchical models of object representation and recognition in the cortex.
理解人类视觉系统如何识别物体是神经科学中的关键挑战之一。受大量生理学证据的启发,一类基于视觉处理层次组织的通用识别模型应运而生,后续阶段对复杂度不断增加的图像特征敏感。然而,这些模型似乎与一些著名的心理物理学结果不相容。其中突出的是研究图像垂直翻转(尤其是面部图像)导致的识别障碍的实验。据报道,“特征上”不同的面部在翻转后比“结构上”不同的面部更容易区分;这一发现难以与生理学模型相协调。在这里,我们表明,在控制了受试者的预期后,“特征上”和“结构上”变换的面部在翻转效应方面没有差异。这一结果增强了皮层中物体表征和识别的简单层次模型的合理性。