Kellman Philip J, Garrigan Patrick, Shipley Thomas F
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Psychol Rev. 2005 Jul;112(3):586-609. doi: 10.1037/0033-295X.112.3.586.
Perception of objects in ordinary scenes requires interpolation processes connecting visible areas across spatial gaps. Most research has focused on 2-D displays, and models have been based on 2-D, orientation-sensitive units. The authors present a view of interpolation processes as intrinsically 3-D and producing representations of contours and surfaces spanning all 3 spatial dimensions. The authors propose a theory of 3-D relatability that indicates for a given edge which orientations and positions of other edges in 3 dimensions may be connected to it, and they summarize the empirical evidence for 3-D relatability. The theory unifies and illuminates a number of fundamental issues in object formation, including the identity hypothesis in visual completion, the relations of contour and surface processes, and the separation of local and global processing. The authors suggest that 3-D interpolation and 3-D relatability have major implications for computational and neural models of object perception.
在普通场景中对物体的感知需要插值过程,即跨越空间间隙连接可见区域。大多数研究都集中在二维显示上,并且模型是基于二维、方向敏感单元构建的。作者提出了一种观点,认为插值过程本质上是三维的,并能生成跨越所有三个空间维度的轮廓和表面表示。作者提出了一种三维相关性理论,该理论指出对于给定的一条边,在三维空间中其他边的哪些方向和位置可能与它相连,并且他们总结了三维相关性的经验证据。该理论统一并阐明了物体形成中的一些基本问题,包括视觉完成中的身份假设、轮廓和表面过程的关系以及局部和全局处理的分离。作者认为三维插值和三维相关性对物体感知的计算和神经模型具有重要意义。