PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope...

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PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation Local vs. Global scope Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”) Organizing the perceptual world Gestalt “strategies” of grouping Recognizing familiar patterns Changes in performance and process as we practice Impairments of pattern recognition skill

Transcript of PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope...

Page 1: PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope –Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION

• Making sense of sensation– Local vs. Global scope– Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs.

Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

• Organizing the perceptual world– Gestalt “strategies” of grouping

• Recognizing familiar patterns– Changes in performance and process as

we practice

• Impairments of pattern recognition skill

Page 2: PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope –Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

GESTALT “STRATEGIES” OF PATTERN ORGANIZATION

PROXIMITY

SIMILARITY

CONTINUITY

CLOSURE

Page 3: PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope –Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

ASYMMETRIES INHEMISPHERIC PROCESSING

One hypothesis:

Left Hemisphere specialized for “local detail,” fine-grained analysis

Right Hemisphere specialized for “global form” and wide scope

Damaged LH Damaged RH

Page 4: PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope –Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

• vast number of distinct patterns can be learned– e.g., over 60,000 spoken or written

words

• recognition can with practice by very fast and “automatic”– e.g., Lexical Decision Speed

BLACK ? ~600 msec

BLARK

• can succeed in spite of great variability of input (“noise”)

SOME BASIC FACTS ABOUTHUMAN PATTERN RECOGNITION

Page 5: PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope –Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

PRACTICE AND PATTERN RECOGNITION SKILL

• speed and accuracy improve

• requires less attention and effort

• becomes more “noise resistant”

• “distinctive” features are learned

• “prototype” patterns may be learned

• larger “units of recognition” emerge

• skill, and impairment, are “domain-specific”

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THE POWER LAW OF PRACTICE

Speed and accuracy improve,but at an ever-slower rate

Task: reading inverted text (Kolers, 1975)

Time = 10 x practice a -b

1

4

7

10

13

16

19

min

/pa

ge

2 4 8 16 32 64128

# of pages read (LOG)

1

10

100

min

/pa

ge

(L

OG

)

2 4 8 16 32 64128

# of pages read (LOG)

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LEARNING DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF PATTERNS

Feature Analysis: Define a small setof features whose presence andarrangement defines the patterns

FEATURESVoicing

Place ofArticulation

Voiced Unvoiced

Bilabial

Alveolar

/b/ /p/

/d/ /t/

e. g.: consonant phonemes

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Fig. 3-17, p. 69

FEATURES and RELATIONSRecognizing Objects by Components(Biederman’s RBC model)

Page 9: PERCEPTION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION Making sense of sensation –Local vs. Global scope –Data-driven (sensory, bottom-up) vs. Concept-driven (knowledge, “top-down”)

ABSTRACTING THE ”TYPICAL” PATTERN (PROTOTYPE)

Task: learn to categorize faces: (Reed, ‘72)

Category 1

Category 2

Then tested on old and new faces:

P2 P1

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EVIDENCE FOR PROTOTYPE ABSTRACTION (Reed, 1972)

• “Studied” prototypes are classified more quickly and accurately than other studied patterns

• Even if prototype had not been studied,– it was still the easiest to classify– and was often falsely identified as

“studied” in an old/new decision

Reed Biederman

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PRINTED WORDS AS UNITS OF PATTERN RECOGNITION

Task: letter detection

WARM WBPM ###MOR OR30 MSEC

Then…(1 sec)

M#$%& N

Reicher (1969): where unitizing helps

70%C 58%C 62%C

Johnson (1987): where unitizing hurts

“is first letter an “R”?

BEAN faster than BEAR

but BFXN equal to BFXR

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STIMULUS FEATURES AND SENTENCE CONTEXT(Rueckl & Oden, 1986)

Task: read sentence contexts,

The { lion tamer / dairy farmer } raised ____ to supplement his income.

then. .

0

20

40

60

80

100

% s

ee

ing

{b

ea

r}

Stimulus feature (in bea_s)

Dairy Farmer

Lion Tamer

bearsbeans . . . . . . .

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IMPAIRMENTS OF PATTERN RECOGNITION SKILL

• Skills, and impairments, tend to be “domain-specific” to codes or modality:– ALEXIA WITHOUT AGRAPHIA

• can’t read, but can write– PROSOPAGNOSIA

• can’t recognize familiar faces

–MOTION AND COLOR AGNOSIA

•objects appear still, or “grey”–AMUSIA

•can’t recognize/match familiar melodies

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DEVELOPMENTAL DYSLEXIA

• defined as a selective slowness in reading acquisition and speed

• estimates range from 2% to 10% of school population

• similar numbers of boys and girls

• not a problem of visual perception

• perceiving and representing rapid sequences of speech sounds

• predicted by “phonological awareness” tests

• reading and complex phonology remain problems into adulthood