When referring to a target object in a visual scene, speakers are assumed to consider certain distractor objects to be more relevant than others. The current research predicts that the way in which speakers come to a set of relevant distractors depends on how they perceive the distance between the objects in the scene. It reports on the results of two language production experiments, in which participants referred to target objects in photo-realistic visual scenes. Experiment 1 manipulated three factors that were expected to affect perceived distractor distance: two manipulations of perceptual grouping (region of space and type similarity), and one of presentation mode (2D vs. 3D). In line with most previous research on visually-grounded re...
137 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Although the scene processing...
Naturally, our visual system receives a staggering amount of information from the environment. Mecha...
Situated language production requires the integration of visual attention and lin-guistic processing...
This study explored two factors that might have an impact on how participants perceive distance betw...
In two experiments, we investigate to what extent various visual saliency cues in realistic visual s...
The current study investigates how speakers are affected by the size of the visual domain during ref...
To what extent is the choice of what to say driven by seemingly irrelevant cues in the visual world ...
Reference is the cognitive mechanism that binds real-world en-tities to their conceptual counterpart...
It has often been observed that color is a highly preferred attribute for use in distinguishing desc...
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by ...
Research on language production has focused on the process of utterance planning and involved studyi...
This thesis investigates the mechanisms underlying the formation, maintenance, and sharing of refere...
Speakers’ perception of a visual scene influences the language they use to describe it—which objects...
AbstractTheories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that se...
Research on language production has focused on the process of utterance planning and involved studyi...
137 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Although the scene processing...
Naturally, our visual system receives a staggering amount of information from the environment. Mecha...
Situated language production requires the integration of visual attention and lin-guistic processing...
This study explored two factors that might have an impact on how participants perceive distance betw...
In two experiments, we investigate to what extent various visual saliency cues in realistic visual s...
The current study investigates how speakers are affected by the size of the visual domain during ref...
To what extent is the choice of what to say driven by seemingly irrelevant cues in the visual world ...
Reference is the cognitive mechanism that binds real-world en-tities to their conceptual counterpart...
It has often been observed that color is a highly preferred attribute for use in distinguishing desc...
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by ...
Research on language production has focused on the process of utterance planning and involved studyi...
This thesis investigates the mechanisms underlying the formation, maintenance, and sharing of refere...
Speakers’ perception of a visual scene influences the language they use to describe it—which objects...
AbstractTheories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that se...
Research on language production has focused on the process of utterance planning and involved studyi...
137 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Although the scene processing...
Naturally, our visual system receives a staggering amount of information from the environment. Mecha...
Situated language production requires the integration of visual attention and lin-guistic processing...