Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Seeing overall structures in preattentive vision

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

According to the recent psychological researches by Julesz[1-3], Beck[4-6], and Treisman[7], human visual system operates in two distinct modes: preattentive mode and attentive mode. Preattentive vision detects local conspicuous features, called textons and directs attentive vision to the location where texton-gradients occur. The preattentive texture discrimination is the result of difference in first-order statistics of textons. Based on this theory, several computational models have been built to compute texture boundaries by computing local features and their local distributions [8-11]. Evidences presented in this paper show that preattentive texture discriminability is not merely determined by the first-order statistics of textons, but it is also under the influence of the overall structures of the textures. The overall structures of the textures which can be preattentively perceived are built on the local lightness or colors rather than the local spatial features or textons. Therefore preattentive vision is not merely engaged in detecting local features, it can also grasps the overall structures based on the variations of local lightness or colors.

© 1991 Optical Society of America

PDF Article
More Like This
Predictions from a computational model of texture perception compared with psychophysical data

Jitendra Malik and Pietro Perona
MD2 Image Understanding and Machine Vision (IUMV) 1989

Vision

Gerald Westheimer
WY4 OSA Annual Meeting (FIO) 1991

Why ignore color vision confusion?

Odeda Rosenthal
MX6 OSA Annual Meeting (FIO) 1991

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.