Psychophysical experiments reveal our horizontal preference in perceptual filling-in at the blind spot. On the other hand, tolerance in filling-in exhibit vertical preference. What causes this anisotropy in our perception? Building upon the general notion that the functional properties of the early visual system are shaped by the innate specification as well as the statistics of the environment, we reasoned that the anisotropy in filling-in could be understood in terms of anisotropy in orientation distribution inherent in natural scene statistics. We examined this proposition by investigating filling-in of bar stimuli in a Hierarchical Predictive Coding model network. The model network, trained with natural images, exhibited anisotropic filling-in performance at the blind spot, which is similar to the findings of psychophysical experiments. We suggest that the over-representation of horizontal contours in the natural scene contributes to the observed horizontal superiority in filling-in and the broader distribution of vertical contours contributes to the observed vertical superiority of tolerance in filling-in. These results indicate that natural scene statistics plays a significant role in determining the filling-in performance at the blind spot and shaping the associated anisotropies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5472637PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-03713-wDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

natural scene
16
blind spot
16
scene statistics
12
filling-in
9
perceptual filling-in
8
filling-in blind
8
psychophysical experiments
8
tolerance filling-in
8
model network
8
filling-in performance
8

Similar Publications

Drones are extensively utilized in both military and social development processes. Eliminating the reliance of drone positioning systems on GNSS and enhancing the accuracy of the positioning systems is of significant research value. This paper presents a novel approach that employs a real-scene 3D model and image point cloud reconstruction technology for the autonomous positioning of drones and attains high positioning accuracy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Roadside tree segmentation and parameter extraction play an essential role in completing the virtual simulation of road scenes. Point cloud data of roadside trees collected by LiDAR provide important data support for achieving assisted autonomous driving. Due to the interference from trees and other ground objects in street scenes caused by mobile laser scanning, there may be a small number of missing points in the roadside tree point cloud, which makes it familiar for under-segmentation and over-segmentation phenomena to occur in the roadside tree segmentation process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Interacting hand reconstruction presents significant opportunities in various applications. However, it currently faces challenges such as the difficulty in distinguishing the features of both hands, misalignment of hand meshes with input images, and modeling the complex spatial relationships between interacting hands. In this paper, we propose a multilevel feature fusion interactive network for hand reconstruction (HandFI).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Multi-Band Scattering Characteristics of Miniature Masson Pine Canopy Based on Microwave Anechoic Chamber Measurement.

Sensors (Basel)

December 2024

Laboratory of Target Microwave Properties, Deqing Academy of Satellite Applications, Deqing 313200, China.

Using microwave remote sensing to invert forest parameters requires clear canopy scattering characteristics, which can be intuitively investigated through scattering measurements. However, there are very few ground-based measurements on forest branches, needles, and canopies. In this study, a quantitative analysis of the canopy branches, needles, and ground contribution of Masson pine scenes in C-, X-, and Ku-bands was conducted based on a microwave anechoic chamber measurement platform.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Music pre-processing methods are currently becoming a recognized area of research with the goal of making music more accessible to listeners with a hearing impairment. Our previous study showed that hearing-impaired listeners preferred spectrally manipulated multi-track mixes. Nevertheless, the acoustical basis of mixing for hearing-impaired listeners remains poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!