Problem 4: Object perception Flashcards

1
Q

visual agnosia

A

problems with object recognition and object constancy even though stimuli is registered in the brain

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2
Q

apperceptive agnosia

A

object recognition problems

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3
Q

integrative agnosia

A

difficulties perceiving different parts as a whole

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3
Q

integrative agnosia

A

difficulties perceiving different parts as a whole

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4
Q

associative agnosia

A

difficulties in understanding the meaning of an object

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5
Q

Treisman & Gelade (1980), which types of attention, types of visual search

A

Feature integration theory: explains how we combine different pieces of visual information to make a complete perception of the object
- reflexive attention: driven by stimuli
- voluntary attention: voluntarily focussing on something
- feature (pop-out) search: target possesses one distinguishable feature
- conjunction search: searching for combination of multiple features

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6
Q

what are the stages in the Feature integration theory

A

-preattentive stage: focus on aspect of the objects (feature search)
-focussed attention stage: multiple aspects are combined (conjunction search)

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7
Q

recognition by components theory + principle of componential recovery

A

recognition of objects is based on geons (basic geometrical features of an object). the principle of componential recovery = we can identify an object if we can identify its geons.

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8
Q

what are characteristics of geons + criticism

A

-invariant information (can be viewed from different angles)
-discriminability (each type of object has a certain type of neon)
- resistance to visual noise

criticism:
-do not distinguish objects within a category
- cannot account for gestalt grouping and organisation theory

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9
Q

propagnosia

A

-visual impairment in recognising faces
-mostly caused by damage to the inferior part of the temporal lobe (FFA)

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10
Q

alexia

A

-acquired difficulty in reading
-can see words and letters but has no access to the orthographic networks
-caused by brain injuries

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11
Q

which deficits are combined most often

A

holistic processing (whole, relations) = faces + objects
analytic processing (parts) = objects and words

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12
Q

gestalt approach

A

approach: whole differs form the sum of its parts, rejecting structuralism: gestalt can explain apparent movement and illusory contours, structuralism can’t.

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13
Q

law of pragnanz

A

the brain tries to see the simplest patterns

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14
Q

law of similarity

A

similar things appear to be grouped together

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15
Q

law of common fate

A

things that are moving in the same direction appear to be grouped

16
Q

law of familiarity

A

things that form familiar or meaningful patterns appear to be grouped together

17
Q

principle of common region

A

elements that are within the same region appear to be grouped together

18
Q

principle of uniform connectedness

A

a connected region of visual properties appears as a single unit

19
Q

principle of synchrony

A

visual events that occur at the same time are perceived as belong together

20
Q

law of closure

A

elements enclosing an area appear to be grouped together

21
Q

figure-ground segregation + characteristics

A

you either focus on the object or the background
- border ownership: a visual border between figure and ground appear to belong to the figure
- figures are more memorable, symmetrical, being in the front, smaller etc.