Bracci Stefania, Op de Beeck Hans P
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento, Rovereto, Italy; email:
Leuven Brain Institute, Research Unit Brain & Cognition, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; email:
Annu Rev Psychol. 2023 Jan 18;74:113-135. doi: 10.1146/annurev-psych-032720-041031. Epub 2022 Nov 15.
Objects are the core meaningful elements in our visual environment. Classic theories of object vision focus upon object recognition and are elegant and simple. Some of their proposals still stand, yet the simplicity is gone. Recent evolutions in behavioral paradigms, neuroscientific methods, and computational modeling have allowed vision scientists to uncover the complexity of the multidimensional representational space that underlies object vision. We review these findings and propose that the key to understanding this complexity is to relate object vision to the full repertoire of behavioral goals that underlie human behavior, running far beyond object recognition. There might be no such thing as core object recognition, and if it exists, then its importance is more limited than traditionally thought.
物体是我们视觉环境中的核心有意义元素。经典的物体视觉理论专注于物体识别,简洁而优雅。其中一些观点至今仍然成立,但那份简洁已不复存在。行为范式、神经科学方法和计算建模的最新进展,使视觉科学家能够揭示物体视觉背后多维表征空间的复杂性。我们回顾了这些发现,并提出理解这种复杂性的关键在于将物体视觉与构成人类行为基础的全部行为目标联系起来,而这些目标远远超出了物体识别的范畴。可能并不存在所谓的核心物体识别,如果它存在,那么其重要性也比传统认为的更为有限。