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Cognitive Neuroscience

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Title: Cognitive Neuroscience Author: Cognitive Science Last modified by: Cognitive Science Created Date: 2/26/2003 9:26:49 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cognitive Neuroscience


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Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Recognizing Objects The Computational Problems

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The problem
  • The visual system needs to be general enough so
    as to allow us to recognize objects under
    variable conditionsachieve object constancy
  • Yet specific enough to allow us to detect
    differences between objects, and exemplars of
    objects

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Object constancy
  • We can recognize objects across changes in
  • Illumination
  • Size
  • Occlusion
  • Viewing position
  • These changes create very different signals at
    the retina, the brain must be able to determine
    their constancy despite these differences

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How do we do this? Evidence from cognitive
psychology
  • (1) Independence of visual feature dimensions
  • (2) Vision is non-veridical not simply
    stimulus-driven but also knowledge- driven

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1-Independence of color and shape Illusory
conjunctions
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  • 5 T S N 8

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1-Independence of color and form Feature and
conjunction search (Treisman and colleagues)
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Features?
  • Visual search methods can be used to reveal the
    features that are independently processed by the
    visual system

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2-Knowledge-driven perception
  • Data (stimulus) driven (bottomup)
  • Knowledge driven (top-down)

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2-Knowledge-driven perception Illusory contours
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2-Knowledge driven perception Grouping (Gestalt)
principles
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2-Knowledge driven perception Grouping
(Gestalt) principles
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Features principles grouping of features
  • Illusory conjunctions within vs. across groups

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Features principles grouping of features
  • Illusory conjunctions within vs. across groups

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Structural descriptions
  • How/what is information stored that will support
    general and specific object recognition across a
    wide range of viewing conditions?
  • Templates?
  • Structural descriptions?
  • Extremely difficult problem, receiving
    considerable research attention.

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Predictions for breakdown?
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AgnosiaJGE (Leek Rapp, 199)
  • 74 year-old male
  • Masters degree, high-school business teacher
  • Left CVA affecting left occipito-parietal region
    and a small right occipital infarct
  • Auditory comprehension and spoken production
    excellent

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rack of trays mule bowl cabinet
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Picture Naming
  • Accuracy 75 (349/464) correct
  • Errors
  • Visualsemantic 45 (sheep -gt cow)
  • Semantic 26 (shoe -gt sweater)
  • Visual 17 (baseball bat -gt cigarette)
  • Circumlocutions 10 (helicopter -gt flies about,
    flying ambulance)
  • Dont Know 1

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Where is the breakdown?
Naming?
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A naming problem?
  • Naming from other modalities of input
  • Tactile
  • -50 objects to name from tactile presentation
    with eyes closed (including 21 items previously
    named incorrectly with visual input)
  • -results 96 correct (100 correct on subset)
  • To definition
  • -asked to provide a definition of 42 objects
    misnamed from vision
  • -results 98 correct

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Where is the breakdown?
Knowledge of The visual attributes of objects?
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Knowledge of visual attributes?
  • Drawing from memory
  • -36 objects he had previously misnamed
  • -results 92 correct (inclusion of object parts
    and spatial configuration)
  • Verbal definitions
  • -asked to define 42 objects previously misnamed
  • -results 100 correct, including info about
    shape and appearance

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Knowledge of visual attributes?
  • Verbal definitions
  • -asked to define 42 objects previously misnamed
  • -results 100 correct, including info about
    shape and appearance
  • Shoe made of leather, opens up, may be laced,
    has a heel, maybe a two inch heel and a sole.
    You wear them on your feet
  • Chair four legs, various kinds, folding chairs,
    Used for sitting. Have upholstery, has a back
    made of wood, has a back

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Knowledge of visual attributes?
  • Color, size and function matching to auditory
    stimuli (e.g.,color is an apple or a
    pineapple the color of a strawberry? size Is
    a harp or a football the size of a toaster?
    function Does a pen or a stapler have a similar
    function a a typewriter?
  • auditory
  • Function 100
  • Size 100
  • Color 100

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Knowledge of visual attributes?
  • Color, size and function matching
  • auditory visual
  • Function 100 76
  • Size 100 65
  • Color 100 57

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Where is the breakdown?
Can he see forms, edges, surfaces?
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Perception?
  • Copying
  • -asked to copy 30 objects previously misnamed
  • -results 100 correct, including info about
    shape and appearance
  • Overlapping figures
  • -100 (35/35) altho only
  • named 27/35 correctly

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Where is the breakdown?
?
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Visual object recognition?
  • Object Decision

Results 80 (normal Ss 94)
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Matching across orientation?
Results 71 correct (control Ss 97)
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Where is the breakdown? Working hypothesis
in constructing Or manipulating 3-D
representations of object shapes
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