A common light-prior for visual search, shape, and reflectance judgments
A common light-prior for visual search, shape, and reflectance judgments
The “light-from-above” prior is invoked to simplify and expedite complex visual processing. This prior is observed in visual search and shape judgments with shaded stimuli, where perceived shape and ease of target identification are both affected by stimulus orientation. In addition, perceived surface reflectance varies with surface orientation in a manner consistent with assumed overhead lighting. Do the light-priors exhibited by these different tasks have the same underlying mechanism or even lighting direction? Some evidence has suggested that an “above-left” rather than “above” prior guides behavior in some tasks, but not others. In the current study, the “light-from-above” prior was measured using visual search, shape perception, and a novel reflectance-judgment task. There were substantial differences between observers. However, strong positive correlations were found between the light-priors measured using all three tasks. The data imply that a single mechanism is responsible for a light-from-above prior in “quick and dirty” visual search behavior, shape perception, and reflectance judgments. Furthermore, the data support the notion that perceived shape is the preattentive feature in visual search with shaded targets.
shape from shading, visual search, light-from-above, prior, lightness, shape
1-7
Adams, Wendy J.
25685aaa-fc54-4d25-8d65-f35f4c5ab688
31 August 2007
Adams, Wendy J.
25685aaa-fc54-4d25-8d65-f35f4c5ab688
Adams, Wendy J.
(2007)
A common light-prior for visual search, shape, and reflectance judgments.
Journal of Vision, 7 (11), .
Abstract
The “light-from-above” prior is invoked to simplify and expedite complex visual processing. This prior is observed in visual search and shape judgments with shaded stimuli, where perceived shape and ease of target identification are both affected by stimulus orientation. In addition, perceived surface reflectance varies with surface orientation in a manner consistent with assumed overhead lighting. Do the light-priors exhibited by these different tasks have the same underlying mechanism or even lighting direction? Some evidence has suggested that an “above-left” rather than “above” prior guides behavior in some tasks, but not others. In the current study, the “light-from-above” prior was measured using visual search, shape perception, and a novel reflectance-judgment task. There were substantial differences between observers. However, strong positive correlations were found between the light-priors measured using all three tasks. The data imply that a single mechanism is responsible for a light-from-above prior in “quick and dirty” visual search behavior, shape perception, and reflectance judgments. Furthermore, the data support the notion that perceived shape is the preattentive feature in visual search with shaded targets.
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Published date: 31 August 2007
Keywords:
shape from shading, visual search, light-from-above, prior, lightness, shape
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Local EPrints ID: 48092
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/48092
ISSN: 1534-7362
PURE UUID: 931e03e2-f44d-457e-accf-0a6b94ef3ede
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Date deposited: 24 Aug 2007
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:39
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