Literature DB >> 29662430

Rules infants look by: Testing the assumption of transitivity in visual salience.

Melissa M Kibbe1, Zsuzsa Kaldy2, Erik Blaser2.   

Abstract

What drives infants' attention in complex visual scenes? Early models of infant attention suggested that the degree to which different visual features were detectable determines their attentional priority. Here, we tested this by asking whether two targets - defined by different features, but each equally salient when evaluated independently - would drive attention equally when pitted head-to-head. In Experiment 1, we presented 6-month-old infants with an array of gabor patches in which a target region varied either in color or spatial frequency from the background. Using a forced-choice preferential-looking method, we measured how readily infants fixated the target as its featural difference from the background was parametrically increased. Then, in Experiment 2, we used these psychometric preference functions to choose values for color and spatial frequency targets that were equally salient (preferred), and pitted them against each other within the same display. We reasoned that, if salience is transitive, then the stimuli should be iso-salient and infants should therefore show no systematic preference for either stimulus. On the contrary, we found that infants consistently preferred the color-defined stimulus. This suggests that computing visual salience in more complex scenes needs to include factors above and beyond local salience values.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Visual salience; color; infants; saliency map; spatial frequency

Year:  2017        PMID: 29662430      PMCID: PMC5898438          DOI: 10.1111/infa.12219

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infancy        ISSN: 1532-7078


  34 in total

1.  Attention activates winner-take-all competition among visual filters.

Authors:  D K Lee; L Itti; C Koch; J Braun
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 24.884

2.  Feature analysis and the role of similarity in preattentive vision.

Authors:  H C Nothdurft
Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1992-10

3.  On computational modeling of visual saliency: Examining what's right, and what's left.

Authors:  Neil D B Bruce; Calden Wloka; Nick Frosst; Shafin Rahman; John K Tsotsos
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2015-02-07       Impact factor: 1.886

Review 4.  Infant visual preferences: a review and new theoretical treatment.

Authors:  M S Banks; A P Ginsburg
Journal:  Adv Child Dev Behav       Date:  1985

5.  Infant pattern vision: a new approach based on the contrast sensitivity function.

Authors:  M S Banks; P Salapatek
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  1981-02

6.  The nature of infant color categorization: evidence from eye movements on a target detection task.

Authors:  Anna Franklin; Michael Pilling; Ian Davies
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  2005-07

7.  Red to green or fast to slow? Infants' visual working memory for "just salient differences".

Authors:  Zsuzsa Kaldy; Erik Blaser
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2013-03-22

Review 8.  Top-down versus bottom-up attentional control: a failed theoretical dichotomy.

Authors:  Edward Awh; Artem V Belopolsky; Jan Theeuwes
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 20.229

9.  How to Compare Apples and Oranges: Infants' Object Identification Tested With Equally Salient Shape, Luminance and Color Changes.

Authors:  Zsuzsa Kaldy; Erik Blaser
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2009-03

10.  An eye tracking investigation of developmental change in bottom-up attention orienting to faces in cluttered natural scenes.

Authors:  Dima Amso; Sara Haas; Julie Markant
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-22       Impact factor: 3.240

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