objects and scenes pt 1 Flashcards

1
Q

what is the inverse projection problem

A

2d image on retina from 3D world

  • different objects can look identical (infinity -> 1)
  • single object can look different (1->infinity)
    ex. ambiguous cylinder illusion
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2
Q

viewpoint invariance

A

ability to recognize an object regardless of viewpoint

ex. same person from diff angles

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3
Q

gestalt approach of principals of perceptual organization

A
  • the whole is other than the sum of its parts
    ex. apparent motion, subjective color, illusory contours
    triangle and 3 circle illusion
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4
Q

principles of perceptual grouping

A

good continuation: lines follow the smoothest path
good figure: patterns are as simple as possible
similarity: similar things grouped together
proximity: nearby objects appear grouped together
common fate: elements moving together grouped
common region: same region of space
uniform connectedness: connected regions single unit

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5
Q

principles of perceptual segregation

A

figure ground seperation:
- figure is thing and memorable
- ground is more uniform and not memorable
border belongs to the figure (border ownership)

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6
Q

figure features

A

lower and convex

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7
Q

gestault approach features

A

holistic- way we interpret objects as the whole

bottom up- relying on the stimulus and not past experience

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8
Q

RBC theory

A

recognitino by components theory

  • we percevie elementry features to observe objects
  • an object is recognized when enough info is available to identify its geons
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9
Q

geon

A

set of canonical shapes that we can think of the world as being composed of

  • discriminable
  • resitance to visual noice
  • invariance
  • distinct
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10
Q

principal of componential recovery

A

object recognition is not based on the amount of information but the ability to identify its geons
- can see object best when u have the most info about geons (corner/turns)

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11
Q

JIM (jim and Irvs model)

A

builds up from small details to an overall object

  • bottom up, neurally inspired
  • edge detectors/vertices
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12
Q

what is the GIST of a scene

A

counters the RBC theory which says we build up from small details to overall objects
experiments shown that we perceive large scale properties first and then smaller

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13
Q

how do we perceive gist

A

global image features- naturalness, openness, roughness, expansion, color

  • simultaneously process visual scene at frequencies
    low: gist
    high: detail
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14
Q

hybrid image

A

low spatial frequencies: mairlyn monroe
high spatial frequeuncies: albert einstein
- conflicting info at high and low spatial frequency changes perception

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15
Q

top down processing

A

perception is not purely based on stimulus

depends on experience, expectation and goals

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16
Q

experience

A

figure ground seperation- meaningfulness influences seperation
perceptual organization- based on scenic patterns
object recognition- identify objects based on context

17
Q

hemholtz theory of unconscious interference

A

likelihood principle - perceive the object most likely to cause pattern of stimuli
unconscious inference- application of likelihood principle is unconscious but based on past experience

18
Q

bayesian inference

A

interpreting situations in a way that is most likely based on what you know and what you currently are perceiving
-combines posterior belief/ prior belief/ likelihood