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Context effects on object recognition in real-world environments: A study protocol.

Victoria I Nicholls1, Benjamin Alsbury-Nealy2, Alexandra Krugliak1

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Real-world environments impact object recognition. This study used augmented reality and mobile electroencephalography to show how scene-object congruence affects visual and semantic processing during object recognition.

Keywords:
Object recognitionaugmented realitycontextmobile EEGreal-world neuroscience

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Human-Computer Interaction
  • Visual Perception

Background:

  • Environmental context influences object recognition, with expected objects recognized faster.
  • Previous studies often isolate objects, neglecting real-world environmental impacts.
  • The specific processing stages affected by environmental context remain unclear.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how real-world environments affect object recognition.
  • To examine the impact of scene-object congruence on visual and semantic processing.
  • To utilize mobile electroencephalography (mEEG) and augmented reality (AR) for ecological assessment.

Main Methods:

  • AR presented congruent and incongruent virtual objects in indoor/outdoor settings.
  • 34 participants navigated environments while eye movements and neural signals (mEEG) were recorded.
  • Analyses included event-related potentials (ERPs) and representational similarity analysis (RSA) with computational models.

Main Results:

  • Replication of congruency effects on N300/400 event-related potentials.
  • Representational Similarity Analysis indicated earlier processing of visual and semantic information for congruent scenes.
  • Data suggest environmental context significantly modulates object recognition processes.

Conclusions:

  • Scene-object congruence facilitates object recognition, as hypothesized.
  • Congruency effects were observed in ERPs (N300/400) and representational similarity.
  • Mobile EEG in real environments reveals context's impact on distinct object recognition stages.