نتایج جستجو برای: spatial frequency

تعداد نتایج: 819082  

Journal: :The Spanish journal of psychology 2007
Vicente Sierra-Vázquez Ignacio Serrano-Pedraza

The perception of the Müller-Lyer illusion has previously been explained as a result of visual low band-pass spatial filtering, although, in fact, the illusion persists in band-pass and high-pass filtered images without visible low-spatial frequencies. A new theoretical framework suggests that our perceptual experience about the global spatial structure of an image corresponds to the amplitude ...

Journal: :Psychological research 2017
Jessica Royer Verena Willenbockel Caroline Blais Frédéric Gosselin Sandra Lafortune Josiane Leclerc Daniel Fiset

It has previously been proposed that holistic face processing is based on low spatial frequencies (SFs) whereas featural processing relies on higher SFs, a hypothesis still widespread in the face processing literature today (e.g. Peters et al. in Eur J Neurosci 37(9):1448-1457, 2013). Since upright faces are supposedly recognized through holistic processing and inverted faces, using features, i...

2014
Craig K. Abbey Miguel P. Eckstein

The efficiency of visual tasks involving localization has traditionally been evaluated using forced choice experiments that capitalize on independence across locations to simplify the performance of the ideal observer. However, developments in ideal observer analysis have shown how an ideal observer can be defined for free-localization tasks, where a target can appear anywhere in a defined sear...

2015
Wilma A. Bainbridge Aude Oliva

For psychologists and neuroscientists, careful selection of their stimuli is essential, so that low-level visual features such as color or spatial frequency do not serve as confounds between conditions of interest. Here, we detail the Natural Image Statistical Toolbox, which allows scientists to measure, visualize, and control stimulus sets along a set of low-level visual properties. Additional...

Journal: :Cerebral cortex 2005
Topi Tanskanen Risto Näsänen Teresa Montez Juha Päällysaho Riitta Hari

To find cortical correlates of face recognition, we manipulated the recognizability of face images in a parametric manner by masking them with narrow-band spatial noise. Face recognition performance was best at the lowest and highest noise spatial frequencies (NSFs, 2 and 45 c/image, respectively), and degraded gradually towards central NSFs (11-16 c/image). The strength of the 130-180 ms neuro...

Journal: :Vision Research 1999
Mark W. Cannon Greg J. Reese Steven C. Fullenkamp

We studied the detectability of narrow band random noise targets embedded in narrow band random noise backgrounds as a function of differences in center frequency, spatial frequency bandwidth and orientation bandwidth between target and the immediately adjacent background. Unlike most target detection experiments the targets were not added to the background; they replaced the underlying backgro...

Journal: :Neuroscience research 2003
Lihong Wang Yoshiki Kaneoke Ryusuke Kakigi

Humans can estimate the speed of an object's motion independently of other visual information. Although speed-related neural activity is known to exist in the primate brain, there has been no physiological study that investigated where and how the speed of motion is represented in the human brain. Nine different combinations of spatial and temporal frequencies were used to make drifting sinusoi...

Journal: :Vision Research 1996
Christina A. Burbeck Stephen M. Pizer Bryan S. Morse Dan Ariely Gal S. Zauberman Jannick P. Rolland

The area over which boundary information contributes to the determination of the center of an extended object was inferred from results of a bisection task. The object to be bisected was a rectangle with two long sinusoidally modulated sides, i.e. a wiggly rectangle. The spatial frequency and amplitude of the edge modulation were varied. Two object widths were tested. The modulation of the perc...

Journal: :Perception & psychophysics 2003
Isabelle Boutet Charles Collin Jocelyn Faubert

Configural relations and a critical band of spatial frequencies (SFs) in the middle range are particularly important for face recognition. We report the results of four experiments in which the relationship between these two types of information was examined. In Experiments 1, 2A, and 2B, the face inversion effect (FIE) was used to probe configural face encoding. Recognition of upright and inve...

Journal: :Vision Research 2007
Aaron P. Johnson Nicolaas Prins Frederick A.A. Kingdom Curtis L. Baker

Natural scenes contain localized variations in both first-order (luminance) and second-order (contrast and texture) information. There is much evidence that first- and second-order stimuli are detected by distinct mechanisms in the mammalian visual system. However, in natural scenes the two kinds of information tend to be spatially correlated. Do correlated and uncorrelated combinations of firs...

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