Literature DB >> 18605476

Object detection and basic-level categorization: sometimes you know it is there before you know what it is.

Michael L Mack1, Isabel Gauthier, Javid Sadr, Thomas J Palmeri.   

Abstract

A tight temporal coupling between object detection (is an object there?) and object categorization (what kind of object is it?) has recently been reported (Grill-Spector & Kanwisher, 2005), suggesting that image segmentation into different objects and categorization of those objects at the basic level may be the very same mechanism. In the present work, we decoupled the time course of detection and categorization through two task manipulations. First, inverted objects were categorized significantly less accurately than upright objects across a range of image presentation durations, but no significant effect on object detection was observed. Second, systematically degrading stimuli affected categorization significantly more than object detection. The time course of object detection and object categorization can be selectively manipulated. They are not intrinsically linked. As soon as you know an object is there, you do not necessarily know what it is.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18605476     DOI: 10.3758/pbr.15.1.28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev        ISSN: 1069-9384


  11 in total

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Review 6.  Computational approaches to the development of perceptual expertise.

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Authors:  C Keysers; D K Xiao; P Földiák; D I Perrett
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  28 in total

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7.  Banana or fruit? Detection and recognition across categorical levels in RSVP.

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8.  Detecting and categorizing fleeting emotions in faces.

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Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2012-08-06

9.  Neural Representations in the Prefrontal Cortex Are Task Dependent for Scene Attributes But Not for Scene Categories.

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