Blobs
strengthen repetition but weaken symmetry
Árpád
Csathó, Gert van der Vloed, Peter A. van der
Helm
Abstract.
The human visual system is more sensitive to symmetry than to
repetition.
According to the so-called holographic approach [J. Math. Psychol. 35
(1991)
151; Psychol. Rev 103 (1996) 429; Psychol. Rev 106 (1999) 622],
however,
this perceptual difference between symmetry and repetition depends
strongly
on spatial scaling. This was tested in three experiments, using
symmetry
and repetition stimuli that consisted of black and white patches, with
patch
size as the critical variable. In Experiment 1, patch size was
increased
in the entire pattern, yielding fewer but larger patches (or
blobs).
This is known to have hardly any effect on symmetry but, as found now,
it
does have a strengthening effect on repetition. In the second
experiment, we increased patch size in subpatterns only, yielding
salient blob areas. This again strengthens repetition but, as
double-checked in experiment 3, it can weaken symmetry. These results
agree with the holographic approach, and enable an integration of
computational, algorithmic, and implementational aspects of vision.
|
Vision
Research, 43, 993--1007 (2003) |
Full
text |
|