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Gestalt principles provide a framework for understanding how humans perceive objects as unified wholes within their context. These principles are essential in explaining the cognitive processes that make sense of complex visual stimuli by organizing them into coherent groups. One fundamental principle is proximity, which posits that objects located close to each other are perceived as a collective group. For instance, when dots are positioned near one another, the visual system interprets them...
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Related Experiment Video

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Creating Objects and Object Categories for Studying Perception and Perceptual Learning
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A simple rule to describe interactions between visual categories.

Marlene Poncet1,2, Michele Fabre-Thorpe1, Ramakrishna Chakravarthi3

  • 1CerCo, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, UPS, Toulouse, France.

The European Journal of Neuroscience
|July 3, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

When multiple objects are seen together, one object's category representation automatically influences the processing of another. This visual perception interaction is stronger when categories are more similar, impacting evidence accumulation.

Keywords:
category interactionsdrift diffusion modelprimingrepresentation similarityvisual categorisation

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Visual perception

Background:

  • Humans excel at categorizing isolated objects.
  • Real-world visual scenes contain multiple objects.
  • Understanding interactions between simultaneously active object representations is limited.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how simultaneously active object representations interact.
  • To determine the influence of a "prime" object on target object categorization.
  • To explore the neural mechanisms underlying category interactions.

Main Methods:

  • Participants categorized a target object (basic or superordinate level) while another object's representation was active.
  • Drift diffusion modeling was employed to analyze processing stages.
  • Interference strength was measured based on category similarity.

Main Results:

  • A "prime" object significantly modulated target object responses, indicating rapid and automatic category access.
  • Interference primarily occurred during the evidence accumulation stage of processing.
  • The similarity between distractor and target categories positively correlated with interference strength.

Conclusions:

  • Active object representations automatically influence subsequent categorical processing.
  • Category interactions are governed by the representational distance from a distractor to the target's categorical boundary.
  • These interactions likely stem from the brain's organizational structure of categories.