School of Psychology, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 May 31;8(5):e66015. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0066015. Print 2013.
Observers make sense of scenes by parsing images on the retina into meaningful objects. This ability is retained for line drawings, demonstrating that critical information is concentrated at object boundaries. Information theoretic studies argue for further concentration at points of maximum curvature, or corners, on such boundaries [1]-[3] suggesting that the relative positions of such corners might be important in defining shape. In this study we use patterns subtly deformed from circular, by a sinusoidal modulation of radius, in order to measure threshold sensitivity to shape change. By examining the ability of observers to discriminate between patterns of different frequency and/or number of cycles of modulation in a 2x2 forced choice task we were able to show, psychophysically, that difference in a single cue, the periodicity of the corners (specifically the polar angle between two points of maximum curvature) was sufficient to allow discrimination of two patterns near their thresholds for detection. We conclude that patterns could be considered as labelled for this measure. These results suggest that a small number of such labels might be sufficient to identify an object.
观察者通过将视网膜上的图像解析为有意义的对象来理解场景。这种能力也适用于线条图,这表明关键信息集中在物体边界处。信息论研究认为,在这些边界上的最大曲率点(或拐角)处进一步集中[1]-[3],这表明这些拐角的相对位置对于定义形状可能很重要。在这项研究中,我们使用通过半径正弦调制从圆形略微变形的图案,以测量对形状变化的阈值敏感性。通过在 2x2 强制选择任务中检查观察者区分具有不同频率和/或调制周期数的图案的能力,我们能够从心理物理学上表明,单个线索(具体来说,是两个最大曲率点之间的极角)的周期性差异足以允许在接近检测阈值的两个图案之间进行区分。我们得出的结论是,对于这个测量,可以认为图案是有标签的。这些结果表明,少量这样的标签可能足以识别一个物体。