AbstractTexture boundary segmentation is typically thought to reflect a comparison of differences in Fourier energy (i.e. low-order texture statistics) on either side of a boundary. However in a previous study (Arsenault, Yoonessi, & Baker, 2011) we showed that the distribution of energy within a natural texture (i.e. its higher-order statistical structure) also influences segmentation of contrast boundaries. Here we examine the influence of specific higher-order texture statistics on segmentation of contrast- and orientation-defined boundaries. Using naturalistic synthetic textures to manipulate the sparseness, global phase structure, and local phase alignments of carrier textures, we measure segmentation thresholds based on forced-choice ...
AbstractA prerequisite for higher-level visual tasks such as object recognition is a segmentation of...
AbstractThis paper examines the nature of the post-receptoral chromatic and achromatic mechanisms in...
AbstractNatural scenes contain localized variations in both first-order (luminance) and second-order...
AbstractTexture boundary segmentation is typically thought to reflect a comparison of differences in...
Our perceptual experience of the visual world relies on successful segmentation of distinct regions ...
AbstractRegions of visual texture can be automatically segregated from one another when they abut bu...
An algorithm for finding texture boundaries in images is developed on the basis of a computational m...
AbstractA widespread view is that most texture segregation can be accounted for by differences in th...
AbstractThere are two prevailing explanations for the foveal deficit in texture segmentation reporte...
AbstractJulesz [IRE Trans. Inf. Theory IT-8 (1962) 84] introduced the concept of statistically defin...
Previous work has shown that human vision performs spatial integration of luminance contrast energy,...
Previous work has shown that human vision performs spatial integration of luminance contrast energy,...
Although it happens infrequently in the natural world, the human visual system is able to perceive o...
AbstractTo investigate whether processing underlying texture segmentation is limited when texture is...
AbstractHuman texture vision has been modeled as a filter–rectify–filter (FRF) process, in which ‘2n...
AbstractA prerequisite for higher-level visual tasks such as object recognition is a segmentation of...
AbstractThis paper examines the nature of the post-receptoral chromatic and achromatic mechanisms in...
AbstractNatural scenes contain localized variations in both first-order (luminance) and second-order...
AbstractTexture boundary segmentation is typically thought to reflect a comparison of differences in...
Our perceptual experience of the visual world relies on successful segmentation of distinct regions ...
AbstractRegions of visual texture can be automatically segregated from one another when they abut bu...
An algorithm for finding texture boundaries in images is developed on the basis of a computational m...
AbstractA widespread view is that most texture segregation can be accounted for by differences in th...
AbstractThere are two prevailing explanations for the foveal deficit in texture segmentation reporte...
AbstractJulesz [IRE Trans. Inf. Theory IT-8 (1962) 84] introduced the concept of statistically defin...
Previous work has shown that human vision performs spatial integration of luminance contrast energy,...
Previous work has shown that human vision performs spatial integration of luminance contrast energy,...
Although it happens infrequently in the natural world, the human visual system is able to perceive o...
AbstractTo investigate whether processing underlying texture segmentation is limited when texture is...
AbstractHuman texture vision has been modeled as a filter–rectify–filter (FRF) process, in which ‘2n...
AbstractA prerequisite for higher-level visual tasks such as object recognition is a segmentation of...
AbstractThis paper examines the nature of the post-receptoral chromatic and achromatic mechanisms in...
AbstractNatural scenes contain localized variations in both first-order (luminance) and second-order...