Perception 3

Cards (39)

  • What are the two approaches to perceptual organization discussed?
    The structuralist and gestalt approaches
  • Why is it challenging to design a perceiving machine?
    Because visual input gives us ambiguous information about the 3D structure of the world
  • What complicates the organization of visual scenes for computers?
    Image complexity makes it trickier for computers to organize the visual scene into distinct objects
  • What is the main question addressed regarding depth perception?
    How do we perceive depth?
  • What do humans use to infer depth in a visual cue?
    Many sources of information
  • What are monocular cues?
    Cues that work with one eye
  • What does the relative height cue indicate?
    Distant objects are seen as being smaller and higher in relation to closer items
  • How are objects below the horizon perceived in terms of distance?
    They are seen as being more distant if their bases are higher
  • What does the relative size cue indicate?
    If two or more objects are equal in physical size, the more distant one takes up less of your field of view
  • What is necessary for judging distance using relative size?
    Previous knowledge about the relative sizes of objects
  • What does the occlusion cue indicate?
    Closer objects will occlude the further away ones
  • What does linear perspective refer to?
    Parallel lines extending away from the observer converge in the distance
  • What does texture gradient indicate?
    Texture elements become smaller and more dense with distance
  • What happens during foreshortening?
    Circles become ovals when the surface is tilted away
  • What does motion parallax refer to?
    More distant objects glide past us more slowly than nearer objects as we move
  • How do shadows contribute to depth perception?
    Cast shadows can create a strong perception of depth
  • How does shading affect depth perception?
    The brightness of a surface depends on its orientation with respect to the light source
  • What are binocular cues?
    Cues that require both eyes
  • What does disparity in binocular cues refer to?
    It creates a difference in image location of an object seen by the left and right eyes
  • What does the size of the disparity depend on?
    It depends on an object’s depth
  • What is stereoscopic vision?
    Our two eyes receive a slightly different image of the world
  • What is the horopter?
    A set of points in space which project to corresponding positions in the two retinas
  • What does the horopter include?
    The fixation point where participants are supposed to look at the screen
  • What happens to objects closer than the horopter?
    They have crossed disparities
  • What happens to objects further than the horopter?
    They have uncrossed disparities
  • How is depth information extracted from binocular disparities?
    Through the process of stereopsis
  • What does the perception of depth rely on?
    A mix of bottom-up and top-down processes
  • How is depth information also extracted?
    From binocular disparities via a process known as stereopsis
  • What is the main question addressed in Part 2?
    How do we perceive objects?
  • Who pioneered the structuralism approach?
    Wilhelm Wundt
  • What did structuralism propose about perceptions?
    Perceptions are simply the sum of ‘atoms’ of sensation
  • What was the Gestalt school a reaction against?
    Structuralism
  • According to structuralist theorists, how are perceptual objects formed?
    By grouping a number of primary sensations
  • What is the main argument of Gestalt psychologists?
    The whole form/configuration is greater than the sum of its parts
  • How do Gestalt psychologists view objects?
    As stable, organized wholes
  • What are illusory contours?
    Images that cause the perception of edges where there’s no change in luminance/color
  • Why are illusory contours hard to explain through the structuralist approach?
    Because they do not fit the idea of perceptions being the sum of sensations
  • What do Gestalt psychologists propose regarding perceptual organization?
    They propose principles by which elements in an image are grouped to create larger objects
  • What is the law of Pragnanz?
    Of several geometrically possible organizations, the one that possesses the best, simplest, and most stable shape will occur