Relating categorization to set summary statistics perception

被引:0
作者
Noam Khayat
Shaul Hochstein
机构
[1] Hebrew University,Life Sciences Institute and Edmond and Lily Safra Center (ELSC) for Brain Research
来源
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics | 2019年 / 81卷
关键词
Categorization; Prototype; Boundary; Summary statistics; Ensemble; Mean; Range;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Two cognitive processes have been explored that compensate for the limited information that can be perceived and remembered at any given moment. The first parsimonious cognitive process is object categorization. We naturally relate objects to their category, assume they share relevant category properties, often disregarding irrelevant characteristics. Another scene organizing mechanism is representing aspects of the visual world in terms of summary statistics. Spreading attention over a group of objects with some similarity, one perceives an ensemble representation of the group. Without encoding detailed information of individuals, observers process summary data concerning the group, including set mean for various features (from circle size to face expression). Just as categorization may include/depend on prototype and intercategory boundaries, so set perception includes property mean and range. We now explore common features of these processes. We previously investigated summary perception of low-level features with a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) paradigm and found that participants perceive both the mean and range extremes of stimulus sets, automatically, implicitly, and on-the-fly, for each RSVP sequence, independently. We now use the same experimental paradigm to test category representation of high-level objects. We find participants perceive categorical characteristics better than they code individual elements. We relate category prototype to set mean and same/different category to in/out-of-range elements, defining a direct parallel between low-level set perception and high-level categorization. The implicit effects of mean or prototype and set or category boundaries are very similar. We suggest that object categorization may share perceptual-computational mechanisms with set summary statistics perception.
引用
收藏
页码:2850 / 2872
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Relating categorization to set summary statistics perception
    Khayat, Noam
    Hochstein, Shaul
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2019, 81 (08) : 2850 - 2872
  • [2] Ensemble summary statistics as a basis for rapid visual categorization
    Utochkin, Igor S.
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2015, 15 (04):
  • [3] Children's use of visual summary statistics for material categorization
    Balas, Benjamin
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2017, 17 (12):
  • [4] Relating the perception of visual ensemble statistics to individual levels of autistic traits
    Matthew X. Lowe
    Ryan A. Stevenson
    Morgan D. Barense
    Jonathan S. Cant
    Susanne Ferber
    Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2018, 80 : 1667 - 1674
  • [5] Relating the perception of visual ensemble statistics to individual levels of autistic traits
    Lowe, Matthew X.
    Stevenson, Ryan A.
    Barense, Morgan D.
    Cant, Jonathan S.
    Ferber, Susanne
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2018, 80 (07) : 1667 - 1674
  • [6] On set-based association tests: Insights from a regression using summary statistics
    Zhao, Yanyan
    Sun, Lei
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF STATISTICS-REVUE CANADIENNE DE STATISTIQUE, 2021, 49 (03): : 754 - 770
  • [7] Simple Data Sets for Distinct Basic Summary Statistics
    Lesser, Lawrence
    TEACHING STATISTICS, 2011, 33 (01) : 9 - 11
  • [8] Statistical Summary Perception in Vision
    Narayanan Srinivasan
    Journal of the Indian Institute of Science, 2017, 97 : 435 - 442
  • [9] Statistical Summary Perception in Vision
    Srinivasan, Narayanan
    JOURNAL OF THE INDIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE, 2017, 97 (04) : 435 - 442
  • [10] Subcortical encoding of summary statistics in humans
    Zhao, Yuqing
    Zeng, Ting
    Wang, Tongyu
    Fang, Fang
    Pan, Yi
    Jia, Jianrong
    COGNITION, 2023, 234