Visual search for global/local stimulus features in humans and baboons

被引:0
|
作者
Christine Deruelle
Joël Fagot
机构
[1] CNRS,Center for Research in Cognitive Neurosciences
来源
关键词
Visual Search; Stimulus Type; Display Size; Visual Search Task; Global Precedence;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Fagot and Deruelle (1997) demonstrated that, when tested with identical visual stimuli, baboons exhibit an advantage in processing local features, whereas humans show the “global precedence” effect initially reported by Navon (1977). In the present experiments, we investigated the cause of this species difference. Humans and baboons performed a visual search task in which the target differed from the distractors at either the global or the local level. Humans responded more quickly to global than to local targets, whereas baboons did the opposite (Experiment 1). Human response times (RTs) were independent of display size, for both local and global processing. Baboon RTs increased linearly with display size, more so for global than for local processing. The search slope for baboons disappeared for continuous targets (Experiment 2). That effect was not due to variations in stimulus luminance (Experiment 3). Finally, variations in stimulus density affected global search slopes in baboons but not in humans (Experiment 4). Overall, results suggest that perceptual grouping operations involved during the processing of hierarchical stimuli are attention demanding for baboons, but not for humans.
引用
收藏
页码:476 / 481
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Visual search for global/local stimulus features in humans and baboons
    Deruelle, C
    Fagot, J
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 1998, 5 (03) : 476 - 481
  • [2] VISUAL-SEARCH FOR GLOBAL AND LOCAL STIMULUS FEATURES
    SAARINEN, J
    PERCEPTION, 1994, 23 (02) : 237 - 243
  • [3] Joint Coding of Local and Global Deep Features in Videos for Visual Search
    Ding, Lin
    Tian, Yonghong
    Fan, Hongfei
    Chen, Changhuai
    Huang, Tiejun
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING, 2020, 29 : 3734 - 3749
  • [4] VISUAL-SEARCH FOR GLOBAL AND LOCAL FEATURES - IMPLICATIONS FOR GLOBAL GUIDANCE IN FEATURE PROCESSING
    ZHOU, H
    MAY, JG
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1994, 35 (04) : 1621 - 1621
  • [5] Processing of global and local visual information and hemispheric specialization in humans (Homo sapiens) and baboons (Papio papio)
    Fagot, J
    Deruelle, C
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1997, 23 (02) : 429 - 442
  • [6] Selection of local features for visual search
    Francini, Gianluca
    Lepsoy, Skjalg
    Balestri, Massimo
    SIGNAL PROCESSING-IMAGE COMMUNICATION, 2013, 28 (04) : 311 - 322
  • [7] Interactive Product Search Based on Global and Local Visual-Semantic Features
    Skopal, Tomas
    Peska, Ladislav
    Grosup, Tomas
    SIMILARITY SEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, SISAP 2018, 2018, 11223 : 87 - 95
  • [8] Local and global limitations in visual search
    Poder, Endel
    PERCEPTION, 2015, 44 : 147 - 147
  • [9] Local and global orientation in visual search
    Andrew Found
    Hermann J. Müller
    Perception & Psychophysics, 1997, 59 : 941 - 963
  • [10] Local and global orientation in visual search
    Found, A
    Muller, HJ
    PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 1997, 59 (06): : 941 - 963