Detection of (anti)symmetry and (anti)repetition:
Perceptual mechanisms versus cognitive strategies
Peter A. van der
Helm,
Matthias S. Treder
Abstract. Symmetry
and repetition are recognized as cues in perceptual organization, but
there is disagreement on whether they are detected
automatically. This disagreement is resolved by noting that some
studies mixed up shape regularities and shape antiregularities (i.e.,
symmetries and repetitions with mismatches in contour curvature
polarity). The
results of two experiments indicate that a task-irrelevant regularity
is automatically picked up by the visual system, whereas a
task-irrelevant antiregularity is not. This suggests that detection of
regularities is part of the visual system's intrinsic encoding, whereas
detection of antiregularities requires higher cognitive strategies
involving selective attention.
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Vision
Research, 49, 2754--2763 (2009) |
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text |
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