S. J. Thorpe, D. Fize, and C. Marlot (1996) showed how rapidly observers can detect animals in images of natural scenes, but it is still unclear which image features support this rapid detection. A. B. Torralba and A. Oliva (2003) suggested that a simple image statistic based on the power spectrum allows the absence or presence of objects in natural scenes to be predicted. We tested whether human observers make use of power spectral differences between image categories when detecting animals in natural scenes. In Experiments 1 and 2 we found performance to be essentially independent of the power spectrum. Computational analysis revealed that the ease of classification correlates with the proposed spectral cue without being caused by i...
International audienceIn speeded categorization tasks, decisions could be based on diagnostic target...
Visual processing of natural scenes is carried out in a hierarchical sequence of stages that involve...
The “animate monitoring” hypothesis proposes that humans are evolutionarily predisposed to recruit a...
S. J. Thorpe, D. Fize, and C. Marlot (1996) showed how rapidly observers can detect animals in image...
Thorpe et al (Nature 381, 1996) first showed how rapidly human observers are able to classify natura...
Human observers are capable of detecting animals within novel natural scenes with remarkable speed a...
Human observers are capable of detecting animals within novel natural scenes with remarkable speed a...
The algorithmic classification of complex, natural scenes is generally considered a difficult task d...
The algorithmic classification of complex, natural scenes is generally considered a difficult task d...
The processes underlying object recognition are fundamental for the understanding of visual percepti...
AbstractAmplitude spectra might provide information for natural scene classification. Amplitude does...
<div><p>The processes underlying object recognition are fundamental for the understanding of visual ...
The “animate monitoring hypothesis” (New, Cosmides, & Tooby, 2007) states that humans have evolved t...
International audienceHuman observers are capable of detecting animals within novel natural scenes w...
Amplitude spectra might provide information for natural scene classi&#64257;cation. Amplitude do...
International audienceIn speeded categorization tasks, decisions could be based on diagnostic target...
Visual processing of natural scenes is carried out in a hierarchical sequence of stages that involve...
The “animate monitoring” hypothesis proposes that humans are evolutionarily predisposed to recruit a...
S. J. Thorpe, D. Fize, and C. Marlot (1996) showed how rapidly observers can detect animals in image...
Thorpe et al (Nature 381, 1996) first showed how rapidly human observers are able to classify natura...
Human observers are capable of detecting animals within novel natural scenes with remarkable speed a...
Human observers are capable of detecting animals within novel natural scenes with remarkable speed a...
The algorithmic classification of complex, natural scenes is generally considered a difficult task d...
The algorithmic classification of complex, natural scenes is generally considered a difficult task d...
The processes underlying object recognition are fundamental for the understanding of visual percepti...
AbstractAmplitude spectra might provide information for natural scene classification. Amplitude does...
<div><p>The processes underlying object recognition are fundamental for the understanding of visual ...
The “animate monitoring hypothesis” (New, Cosmides, & Tooby, 2007) states that humans have evolved t...
International audienceHuman observers are capable of detecting animals within novel natural scenes w...
Amplitude spectra might provide information for natural scene classi&#64257;cation. Amplitude do...
International audienceIn speeded categorization tasks, decisions could be based on diagnostic target...
Visual processing of natural scenes is carried out in a hierarchical sequence of stages that involve...
The “animate monitoring” hypothesis proposes that humans are evolutionarily predisposed to recruit a...