Literature DB >> 29408262

Multi-level Crowding and the Paradox of Object Recognition in Clutter.

Mauro Manassi1, David Whitney2.   

Abstract

In everyday life, we are constantly surrounded by complex and cluttered scenes. In such cluttered environments, visual perception is primarily limited by crowding, the deleterious influence of nearby objects on object recognition. For the past several decades, visual crowding was assumed to occur at a single stage, only between low-level features or object parts, thus dismantling, destroying, or filtering object information. A large and converging body of evidence has demonstrated that this assumption is false: crowding occurs at multiple stages of visual analysis, and information passes through crowding at each of these stages. This converging empirical evidence points to a seeming paradox: crowding happens at multiple levels, which would seem to impair object recognition, and yet visual information at each of those levels is maintained intact and influences subsequent higher-level visual processing. Thus, while crowding impairs the access we have to visual information at many levels, it does not impair the representation of that information. The resolution of this paradox reveals how the visual system strikes a balance between the limits of object selection and the desire to represent multiple levels of visual information throughout cluttered scenes. Understanding crowding is therefore key to resolving the relationship between the richness of object and scene representations and the limits of conscious object recognition. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29408262     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.12.051

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  27 in total

1.  Ensemble coding of crowd speed using biological motion.

Authors:  Tram T N Nguyen; Quoc C Vuong; George Mather; Ian M Thornton
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2020-11-09       Impact factor: 2.199

2.  Dissociable effects of visual crowding on the perception of color and motion.

Authors:  John A Greenwood; Michael J Parsons
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-03-19       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Crowding and Binding: Not All Feature Dimensions Behave in the Same Way.

Authors:  Amit Yashar; Xiuyun Wu; Jiageng Chen; Marisa Carrasco
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2019-09-18

4.  Contextual-Dependent Attention Effect on Crowded Orientation Signals in Human Visual Cortex.

Authors:  Nihong Chen; Pinglei Bao; Bosco S Tjan
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2018-08-17       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Broad attention uncovers benefits of stimulus uniformity in visual crowding.

Authors:  Koen Rummens; Bilge Sayim
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-12-14       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Spatial Attention Enhances Crowded Stimulus Encoding Across Modeled Receptive Fields by Increasing Redundancy of Feature Representations.

Authors:  Justin D Theiss; Joel D Bowen; Michael A Silver
Journal:  Neural Comput       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 2.026

7.  Morality extracted under crowding impairs face identification.

Authors:  Risako Shirai; Hirokazu Ogawa
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2022-06-24

8.  Ensemble perception without phenomenal awareness of elements.

Authors:  Taisei Sekimoto; Isamu Motoyoshi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-07-13       Impact factor: 4.996

9.  Response selection modulates crowding: a cautionary tale for invoking top-down explanations.

Authors:  Josephine Reuther; Ramakrishna Chakravarthi
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2020-05       Impact factor: 2.199

10.  Visual crowding effect in the parvocellular and magnocellular visual pathways.

Authors:  Nilsu Atilgan; Seung Min Yu; Sheng He
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2020-08-03       Impact factor: 2.240

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