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Visual Agnosia01:12

Visual Agnosia

Visual agnosia is a condition characterized by the inability to recognize visually presented objects despite having normal vision. For instance, a person with visual agnosia can describe the shape and color of an object but cannot identify or name it. This impairment does not affect their visual field, acuity, color vision, brightness discrimination, language, or memory. An example of this condition in a social setting is someone at a dinner party asking for "that silver thing with a round end"...
Errors in Taping01:18

Errors in Taping

Errors in taping arise from multiple factors that can significantly impact measurement accuracy in surveying. Misalignment of the tape, often due to human error, is one primary source. A skilled rear tapeman, using a telescope, can help correct alignment by guiding the head tapeman; however, human limitations still lead to small inaccuracies. These errors may include misplacement of pins or inaccurate tape readings due to common visual confusions, such as mistaking a six for a nine. Such...
Prosopagnosia01:24

Prosopagnosia

Prosopagnosia, also known as face blindness, is the inability to recognize faces. In severe cases, individuals with prosopagnosia may not recognize close family members, including parents and spouses, by their faces. For instance, someone with prosopagnosia might walk past their child in a crowd, only realizing their mistake upon noticing their child's distinctive backpack or favorite jacket. Prosopagnosia specifically impairs facial recognition, while the recognition of other objects or...
Focusing of Light in the Eye01:16

Focusing of Light in the Eye

Light rays enter the eye through the cornea, a transparent dome-shaped tissue that is the eye's outermost layer. The cornea bends or refracts, light rays traveling to the pupil. The shape of the cornea determines how much of the light is bent and whether the image will be focused correctly on the retina at the back of the eye. Once the light has passed through both refraction layers, it converges into a single focal point onto a small area. This is where photoreceptors start transforming...
Errors and Mistakes in Surveying01:19

Errors and Mistakes in Surveying

Errors and mistakes in surveying refer to inaccuracies in measurements and data recording. The errors are deviations from the actual value caused by human sensory limitations, equipment flaws, or environmental effects. These errors are typically unintentional and can result from the inherent imperfections in the instruments used, atmospheric conditions, or the observer’s inability to perceive exact measurements. On the other hand, mistakes are caused by the surveyor's lack of attention,...
Detection of Gross Error: The Q Test01:00

Detection of Gross Error: The Q Test

When one or more data points appear far from the rest of the data, there is a need to determine whether they are outliers and whether they should be eliminated from the data set to ensure an accurate representation of the measured value. In many cases, outliers arise from gross errors (or human errors) and do not accurately reflect the underlying phenomenon. In some cases, however, these apparent outliers reflect true phenomenological differences. In these cases, we can use statistical methods...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 29, 2026

Motion-Acuity Test for Visual Field Acuity Measurement with Motion-Defined Shapes
06:25

Motion-Acuity Test for Visual Field Acuity Measurement with Motion-Defined Shapes

Published on: February 23, 2024

Tactile picture recognition: errors are in shape acquistion or object matching?

Amy A Kalia1, Pawan Sinha

  • 1M.I.T., Department of Brain and Cognitive Science, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. akalia@mit.edu

Seeing and Perceiving
|August 30, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Recognizing tactile pictures is hard because people struggle to perceive the overall shape, not because they can

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Last Updated: May 29, 2026

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Haptics

Background:

  • Tactile picture recognition is challenging for both sighted and blind individuals.
  • The reasons behind this difficulty, whether perceptual or cognitive, remain unclear.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the specific mechanisms hindering tactile picture recognition.
  • To differentiate between difficulties in shape acquisition and object representation.

Main Methods:

  • Experiment 1: Assessed recognition of tactile pictures by blindfolded sighted observers, correlating performance with image characteristics (symmetry, complexity).
  • Experiment 2: Employed drawing experts to visually represent perceived tactile images, categorizing errors.

Main Results:

  • Tactile picture recognition correlated with shape acquisition factors like symmetry and complexity.
  • Drawing experts produced incoherent or inaccurate drawings when recognition failed, indicating shape perception issues.
  • Most errors stemmed from inaccurate global shape perception, not object-level recognition failures.

Conclusions:

  • Low-level tactile shape processing is a primary barrier to recognizing simple tactile object pictures.
  • Difficulties lie in perceiving the overall form, rather than linking perceived shapes to object knowledge.