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Intrinsic and contextual features in object recognition.

Derrick Schlangen1, Elan Barenholtz1

  • 1Psychology Department, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, USA.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Object recognition relies on both intrinsic visual features and contextual information. This study demonstrates that context, like an object's location, can be as crucial as its color or shape for identification.

Keywords:
context effectscue combinationdegraded object recognition

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Perception
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Object recognition is vital for navigating and interacting with the environment.
  • Contextual information aids object recognition, but its efficacy relative to intrinsic features is unclear.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relative contributions of contextual (location) and intrinsic (color, shape) features in object recognition.
  • To determine how observers weigh conflicting or complementary visual and contextual cues.

Main Methods:

  • Four experiments used rendered scenes with novel objects and manipulated target object color and location.
  • Participants performed visual search and object identification tasks with degraded images (blurred) to isolate feature contributions.

Main Results:

  • Objects were identified by location alone when intrinsic features were absent.
  • Color and location were combined for unique object specification.
  • Conflicting color and location cues were weighted equally.
  • Observers prioritized the more statistically reliable cue (color or location).

Conclusions:

  • Contextual information, particularly object location, plays a significant role in object recognition.
  • The brain integrates intrinsic features and contextual cues, dynamically weighting them based on reliability and conflict.