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Face Perception II. Visual Imagery

Face Perception II. Visual Imagery. Is Face Recognition Special?. Arguments have been made for both functional and neuroanatomical specialization for face processing (different from objects) Sources of evidence: Behavioral experiments Brain injury Brain imaging. Farah (1994) experiment.

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Face Perception II. Visual Imagery

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  1. Face PerceptionII. Visual Imagery

  2. Is Face Recognition Special? • Arguments have been made for both functional and neuroanatomical specialization for face processing (different from objects) • Sources of evidence: • Behavioral experiments • Brain injury • Brain imaging

  3. Farah (1994) experiment Adapted from Farah, M.J., Specialization Within Visual object Recognition: Clues from Prosopagnosia and Alexia, in Farah, M.J., and Ratcliff, G. (Eds.), The Neuropsychology of High-Level Vision: Collected Tutorial Essays. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1994, pp. 133–146.

  4. 06-41b Adapted from Farah, M.J., Specialization Within Visual object Recognition: Clues from Prosopagnosia and Alexia, in Farah, M.J., and Ratcliff, G. (Eds.), The Neuropsychology of High-Level Vision: Collected Tutorial Essays. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1994, pp. 133–146.

  5. Results Adapted from Farah, M.J., Specialization Within Visual object Recognition: Clues from Prosopagnosia and Alexia, in Farah, M.J., and Ratcliff, G. (Eds.), The Neuropsychology of High-Level Vision: Collected Tutorial Essays. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1994, pp. 133–146.

  6. Farah (1994) experiment suggests faces are perceived holistically. Suggests that the perception of the face is determined by all parts of the face. • A demo of holistic processing: How about these ones? By disrupting holistic processing, it becomes easier to process the individual parts Do these faces have anything in common?

  7. Effects of Inversion • Humans are attuned to upright faces. Face perception is severely disrupted by inverted faces. This effect is less with objects Thatcher illusion

  8. What do Al and Bill have in common in this picture?

  9. Is Face Recognition Special? • Some evidence from behavioral experiments: • Faces are processed holistically (Farah, 1994): difficult to separately process the parts of faces • Inverted faces are more difficult to recognize or process than inverted objects

  10. Neuropsychological evidence • Face specific deficits found in prosopagnosia • Subjects can identify most objects, but are impaired at recognizing faces • Can name faces from touch and verbal descriptions so prosopagnosia is not a naming deficit  visual pattern recognition problem • Is it specific to faces or any difficult recognition problem?

  11. Prosopagnosics can perform well on difficult object discrimination tasks

  12. In humans, face perception is uniquely associated with activity in the fusiform face area located in the fusiform gyrus in the inferior temporal lobe This finding is more robust in the right vs. left hemisphere. Brain Imaging Evidence

  13. What else can this area learn? • We are well practiced for faces • How about training novel objects: Greeble learning experiment. Over 10 hours on naming Greeble objects

  14. Result • After learning, the “face area” has become the Greeble area

  15. What about real-world experts? • Fusiform area is active for objects that you are an expert in

  16. Evaluation • Maybe faces are not processed so differently from objects. Depends on your level of expertise with objects. • Holistic processing also occurs with familiar objects • Fusiform gyrus can be activated by objects with which we have expertise

  17. Visual Imagery

  18. Visual Imagery • Kosslyn and Thompson (2003, p. 723) • “Visual mental imagery occurs when a visual short-term memory (STM) representation is present but the stimulus is not actually being viewed; visual imagery is accompanied by the experience of ‘seeing with the mind’s eye’.”

  19. Study of Imagery • Banned by behaviorists • Possible subject of study in cognitive psychology • Cognitive psychology is distinguished from the earlier behaviorism by its claim that there are internal representations of knowledge on which the mind operates • However, this is a difficult area of study • Mental images are subjective • How can we show that images are used?

  20. Some Questions about Mental Images • How are mental images represented? Are they processed as visual images? • What is the relationship between imagery and perception? • How are mental images processed and transformed?

  21. Study of Perception “LOOK AT THIS IMAGE” Visual Input Low Level Vision High Level Vision Knowledge

  22. Study of Imagery Visual Input Low Level Vision High Level Vision “IMAGINE A CAT UNDER A TABLE” Knowledge

  23. Mental Rotation • Can mental images be transformed and how could we tell? • Mental rotation task: look at the time it takes to rotate two shapes into correspondence • Demo experiment: http://www.uwm.edu/~johnchay/mrp.htm

  24. Example Trials same different different different same different different different

  25. linear relationship between rotation and reaction time in object comparison The mental process seems to be analogous to the physical process of rotation. Results

  26. Similar Results with Letter Rotation The different degrees of rotations performed on the materials in for mirror-imaged letters and normal letters The mean time to decide whether a visual stimulus was in the normal or mirror-image version as a function of orientation Cooper and Shepard (1973)

  27. Imagery & Perception • Perceptual Anticipation theory (Kosslyn): mechanisms used to generate mental images also involve processes used to perceive stimuli. • Prediction • Mental images should be quasy pictorial • Mental images should activate some of the brain areas involved with visual processing

  28. Just as in visual images, level of detail in mental images can vary Imagine a bee next to a rabbit Imagine a elephant standing next to a rabbit Does a rabbit have eyebrows? Does a rabbit have eyebrows?

  29. Finke and Kosslyn (1980) experiment fixation dot separation Angle of separation Experiment measures field of resolution: the angle of separation into the visual periphery where you cannot distinguish dots any longer

  30. Fields of resolution are similar in perception and imagery Horizontal and vertical fields of resolution in perception and imagery as a function of dot separation and vividness of imagery. Data from Finke and Kosslyn (1980).

  31. Evidence from Brain imaging (fMRI) for involvement of visual processing areas during visual imagery (Le Bihan et al., 1993)

  32. Imagery and Ambiguous Figures How are mental images of ambiguous figures processed? If you see one interpretation, it is very difficult to then imagine the other interpretation (unless you are trained in this task) One difference between imagery and visual perception: visual images, unlike mental images can be easily reinterpreted

  33. Mental Images might miss important aspects of object being imagined • Imagine you have a cube between your thumb and index finger. One corner of the cube touches your thumb, and the diagonally opposite corner touches your index finger. Now, point to the locations of the rest of the corners in space. Many people point (incorrectly) to four points on the same plane half way between the top and bottom corners. Correct Solution:

  34. Analog vs. Propositions Debate • The analog vs. propositional debate • analog: the representation has the same structure as the thing represented (e.g., Kosslyn) • propositional: a sentence-like description of the image, non-spatial (e.g., Pylyshyn) • Most studies mentioned seem to argue for analog representations (e.g., mental rotation, brain imaging studies). Supports Kosslyn’s perceptual anticipation theory • Yet mental images are not processed exactly the same as visual images (ambiguous figures & cube demo)

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