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Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12008/41809 Cómo citar
Título: Psychophysics, Gestalts and Games
Autor: Lezama, José
Blusseau, Samy
Morel, Jean-Michel
Randall, Gregory
Grompone von Gioi, Rafael
Tipo: Capítulo de libro
Palabras clave: Detection theory, Perceptual grouping, Local window, Human detection, Turing test
Descriptores: Procesamiento de Señales
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Resumen: Many psychophysical studies are dedicated to the evaluation of the human gestalt detection on dot or Gabor patterns, and to model its dependence on the pattern and background parameters. Nevertheless, even for these constrained percepts, psychophysics have not yet reached the challenging prediction stage, where human detection would be quantitatively predicted by a (generic) model. On the other hand, Computer Vision has attempted at defining automatic detection thresholds. This chapter sketches a procedure to confront these two methodologies inspired in gestaltism. Using a computational quantitative version of the non-accidentalness principle, we raise the possibility that the psychophysical and the (older) gestaltist setups, both applicable on dot or Gabor patterns, find a useful complement in a Turing test. In our perceptual Turing test, human performance is compared by the scientist to the detection result given by a computer. This confrontation permits to revive the abandoned method of gestaltic games. We sketch the elaboration of such a game, where the subjects of the experiment are confronted to an alignment detection algorithm, and are invited to draw examples that will fool it. We show that in that way a more precise definition of the alignment gestalt and of its computational formulation seems to emerge. Detection algorithms might also be relevant to more classic psychophysical setups, where they can again play the role of a Turing test. To a visual experiment where subjects were invited to detect alignments in Gabor patterns, we associated a single function measuring the alignment detectability in the form of a number of false alarms (NFA). The first results indicate that the values of the NFA, as a function of all simulation parameters, are highly correlated to the human detection. This fact, that we intend to support by further experiments, might end up confirming that human alignment detection is the result of a single mechanism.
Descripción: Trabajo aceptado en Citti G., Sarti A. (eds) Neuromathematics of Vision. Lecture Notes in Morphogenesis. Springer, 2014.
Citación: Lezama, J., Blusseau, S., Morel, J.-M., Randall, Gromponi von Gioi, R." Publicado en: Psychophysics, gestalts and games". G. Citti
A. Sarti (eds.). Neuromathematics of vision (pp. 217–242). Springer-Verlag Publishing/Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34444-2_6
Licencia: Licencia Creative Commons Atribución - No Comercial - Sin Derivadas (CC - By-NC-ND 4.0)
Aparece en las colecciones: Publicaciones académicas y científicas - Instituto de Ingeniería Eléctrica

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