Braje W L, Tjan B S, Legge G E
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
Vision Res. 1995 Nov;35(21):2955-66. doi: 10.1016/0042-6989(95)00071-7.
Recently, Tjan, Braje, Legge and Kersten [(1995) Vision Research, 35, 3053-3069] found that human efficiency for object recognition was less than 10%, indicating that humans fail to use much of the information available to an ideal observer. We examine two explanations for these low efficiencies: (1) humans are inefficient in using high spatial-frequency information; and (2) humans are inefficient in detecting image samples. We tested the first possibility by measuring human efficiency for recognizing low-pass filtered objects, rendered as line drawings and silhouettes, in luminance noise. Efficiency did not improve when high frequencies were removed, and the first explanation was rejected. We tested the second explanation by comparing efficiencies for object detection and recognition. Recognition efficiency was higher than detection efficiency for silhouettes but not line drawings, showing that detection efficiency does not place a ceiling on recognition efficiency. The results indicate that human vision is designed to extract image features, such as contours, that enhance recognition. A computer simulation suggests that this can occur if the observer views the world through a band-pass spatial-frequency channel.
最近,Tjan、Braje、Legge和Kersten[(1995年)《视觉研究》,第35卷,3053 - 3069页]发现,人类识别物体的效率低于10%,这表明人类未能利用理想观察者可获得的大部分信息。我们研究了对这些低效率的两种解释:(1)人类在利用高空间频率信息方面效率低下;(2)人类在检测图像样本方面效率低下。我们通过测量人类在亮度噪声中识别低通滤波后的物体(呈现为线条图和剪影)的效率来测试第一种可能性。去除高频后效率并未提高,第一种解释被否定。我们通过比较物体检测和识别的效率来测试第二种解释。对于剪影,识别效率高于检测效率,但对于线条图则不然,这表明检测效率并未对识别效率设置上限。结果表明,人类视觉旨在提取增强识别能力的图像特征,如轮廓。计算机模拟表明,如果观察者通过带通空间频率通道观察世界,这种情况就可能发生。