Bayesian confusions surrounding
simplicity and likelihood in perceptual organization
Peter A. van der
Helm
Abstract. In
the study of perceptual organization, the Occamian simplicity principle
(which promotes efficiency) and the Helmholtzian likelihood principle
(which promotes veridicality) have been claimed to be equivalent.
Proposed models of these principles may well yield similar outcomes
(especially in everyday situations), but as argued here, claims that
the principles are equivalent confused subjective probabilities (which
are used in Bayesian models of the Occamian simplicity principle) and
objective probabilities (which are needed in Bayesian models of the
Helmholtzian likelihood principle). Furthermore, Occamian counterparts
of Bayesian priors and conditionals have led to another confusion,
which seems to have been triggered by a dual role of regularity in
perception. This confusion is discussed by contrasting complete and
incomplete Occamian approaches to perceptual organization.
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Acta
Psychologica, 138, 337--346 (2011) |
Full
text |
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