The role of convexity in perception of symmetry and in visual short-term memory

被引:4
作者
Bertamini, Marco [1 ]
Helmy, Mai Salah [1 ]
Hulleman, Johan [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Liverpool, Dept Expt Psychol, Liverpool L69 7ZA, Merseyside, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Sch Psychol Sci, Manchester, Lancs, England
关键词
Convexity; Concavity; Visual short-term memory; Symmetry; SHAPE; SEARCH; PARTS; CONCAVITIES; ORIENTATION; ADVANTAGE; FEATURES; OBJECTS; FIGURE; US;
D O I
10.1080/17470218.2012.717953
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Visual perception of shape is affected by coding of local convexities and concavities. For instance, a recent study reported that deviations from symmetry carried by convexities were easier to detect than deviations carried by concavities. We removed some confounds and extended this work from a detection of reflection of a contour (i.e., bilateral symmetry), to a detection of repetition of a contour (i.e., translational symmetry). We tested whether any convexity advantage is specific to bilateral symmetry in a two-interval (Experiment 1) and a single-interval (Experiment 2) detection task. In both, we found a convexity advantage only for repetition. When we removed the need to choose which region of the contour to monitor (Experiment 3) the effect disappeared. In a second series of studies, we again used shapes with multiple convex or concave features. Participants performed a change detection task in which only one of the features could change. We did not find any evidence that convexities are special in visual short-term memory, when the to-be-remembered features only changed shape (Experiment 4), when they changed shape and changed from concave to convex and vice versa (Experiment 5), or when these conditions were mixed (Experiment 6). We did find a small advantage for coding convexity as well as concavity over an isolated (and thus ambiguous) contour. The latter is consistent with the known effect of closure on processing of shape. We conclude that convexity plays a role in many perceptual tasks but that it does not have a basic encoding advantage over concavity.
引用
收藏
页码:767 / 785
页数:19
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1954, ART VISUAL PERCEPTIO
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1991, Detection theory: A user's guide
[3]   Detection of change in shape: an advantage for concavities [J].
Barenholtz, E ;
Cohen, EH ;
Feldman, J ;
Singh, M .
COGNITION, 2003, 89 (01) :1-9
[4]   Visual comparisons within and between object parts: evidence for a single-part superiority effect [J].
Barenholtz, E ;
Feldman, J .
VISION RESEARCH, 2003, 43 (15) :1655-1666
[5]   VERSATILITY AND ABSOLUTE EFFICIENCY OF DETECTING MIRROR SYMMETRY IN RANDOM DOT DISPLAYS [J].
BARLOW, HB ;
REEVES, BC .
VISION RESEARCH, 1979, 19 (07) :783-793
[6]   Global shape processing: Which parts form the whole? [J].
Bell, Jason ;
Hancock, Sarah ;
Kingdom, Frederick A. A. ;
Peirce, Jonathan W. .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2010, 10 (06)
[7]   Orientation tuning of curvature adaptation reveals both curvature-polarity-selective and non-selective mechanisms [J].
Bell, Jason ;
Gheorghiu, Elena ;
Kingdom, Frederick A. A. .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2009, 9 (12)
[8]   The importance of being convex: An advantage for convexity when judging position [J].
Bertamini, M .
PERCEPTION, 2001, 30 (11) :1295-1310
[9]   The shape of holes [J].
Bertamini, M ;
Croucher, CJ .
COGNITION, 2003, 87 (01) :33-54
[10]   Detection of convexity and concavity in context [J].
Bertamini, Marco .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2008, 34 (04) :775-789