Self recognition versus recognition of others by biological motion: Viewpoint-dependent effects
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Self recognition versus recognition of others by biological motion: viewpoint-dependent effects.
We investigated the influence of viewing angle on performance in recognising the identity of one's own person and familiar individuals such as friends or colleagues from walking patterns. Viewpoint-dependent recognition performance was tested in two groups of twelve persons who knew each other very well. Participants' motion data were acquired by recording their walking patterns in three-dimens...
متن کاملMotion recognition of self and others on realistic 3D avatars
Correspondence Sahil Narang, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA. Email: [email protected] Abstract Current 3D capture and modeling technology can rapidly generate highly photorealistic 3D avatars of human subjects. However, while the avatars look like their human counterparts, their movements often do not mimic their own due to existing challenges in accurate motion capture and r...
متن کاملMotion Recognition of Self & Others on Realistic 3D Avatars
Current 3D capture and modeling technology can rapidly generate highly photo-realistic 3D avatars of human subjects. However, while the avatars look like their human counterparts, their movements often do not mimic their own due to existing challenges in accurate motion capture and re-targeting. A better understanding of factors that influence the perception of biological motion would be valuab...
متن کاملViewpoint-dependent recognition of scenes.
Three experiments investigated scene recognition across viewpoint changes, involving same/different judgements on scenes consisting of three objects on a desktop. On same trials, the comparison scene appeared either from the same viewpoint as the standard scene or from a different viewpoint with the desktop rotated about one or more axes. Different trials were created either by interchanging th...
متن کاملViewpoint-dependent recognition of familiar faces.
The question whether object representations in the human brain are object-centered or viewer-centered has motivated a variety of experiments with divergent results. A key issue concerns the visual recognition of objects seen from novel views. If recognition performance depends on whether a particular view has been seen before, it can be interpreted as evidence for a viewer-centered representati...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Journal of Vision
سال: 2004
ISSN: 1534-7362
DOI: 10.1167/4.8.237