| Literature DB >> 15856937 |
S Sabina Wolfson1, Norma Graham.
Abstract
In his long years of studying visual perception, Jacob Beck made many contributions. This article is a short review of one line of his research--that we shared in--and then a presentation of some results from on-going research down the same line. In the 1980s Beck and his colleagues introduced a new kind of visual stimulus: element-arrangement texture patterns. A series of studies with these patterns has shown that a model containing spatial-frequency and orientation-selective channels can explain many aspects of texture perception as long as two kinds of nonlinear processes are also included; the published studies are briefly summarized. The new results come from multiple objective tasks requiring the observer to make simple discriminations between second-order element-arrangement textures. Results with the objective tasks replicate previously published results using subjective ratings, and the use of the objective tasks allows us to explore several more fine-grained questions about complex (second-order) channels and normalization.Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15856937 PMCID: PMC1562549 DOI: 10.1163/1568568053320602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Spat Vis ISSN: 0169-1015