Biological visual systems make use of many different cues for visual judgments. For depth and shape estimation, these include occlusion, texture, perspective, motion parallax, disparity, individual cues, but cannot occur until cues are promoted to a commensurate scale by filling in one or more needed parameters (e.g. the fixation distance for depth estimates, the illuminant color and intensity for estimates of surface color, etc.). These parameters are also estimated using multiple cues (e.g., both retinal and oculomotor cues for the fixation distance). We propose experiments intended to clarify how human observers promote and combine cues. The experimental methods used are bases on perturbation analysis which permits examination of a system that can potentially react to distortions and inconsistencies in stimuli. The proposed research consists of three major tasks. (1) We will examine depth judgments and motor responses in simulated 3-D scenes to determine whether behavior can be well-understood by modeling observers as Bayesian decision makers. If so, any difference between visual judgments and motor responses may be due to different weights given to visual cues due to differences in the corresponding risk factors. (2) The notion of cue promotion suggests that there are parameters that observers must estimate along the way to determining scene geometry and surface properties such as color. Again, a Bayesian model will be used to shed light on the process of estimating these internal parameters. (3) We will continue our studies of the form of representation used by human observers for curves and surfaces as well as 3-dimensional motion paths. These studies will inform our understanding of how object shape and motions are determined from sparse and often conflicting visual data.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01EY008266-12
Application #
6332187
Study Section
Visual Sciences B Study Section (VISB)
Program Officer
Oberdorfer, Michael
Project Start
1989-08-01
Project End
2004-06-30
Budget Start
2001-07-01
Budget End
2002-06-30
Support Year
12
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$251,977
Indirect Cost
Name
New York University
Department
Psychology
Type
Other Domestic Higher Education
DUNS #
004514360
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10012
Aschner, Amir; Solomon, Samuel G; Landy, Michael S et al. (2018) Temporal Contingencies Determine Whether Adaptation Strengthens or Weakens Normalization. J Neurosci 38:10129-10142
Protonotarios, Emmanouil D; Griffin, Lewis D; Johnston, Alan et al. (2018) A spatial frequency spectral peakedness model predicts discrimination performance of regularity in dot patterns. Vision Res 149:102-114
Locke, Shannon M; Landy, Michael S (2017) Temporal causal inference with stochastic audiovisual sequences. PLoS One 12:e0183776
Rizzo, John-Ross; Hosseini, Maryam; Wong, Eric A et al. (2017) The Intersection between Ocular and Manual Motor Control: Eye-Hand Coordination in Acquired Brain Injury. Front Neurol 8:227
Norton, Elyse H; Fleming, Stephen M; Daw, Nathaniel D et al. (2017) Suboptimal Criterion Learning in Static and Dynamic Environments. PLoS Comput Biol 13:e1005304
Rizzo, John-Ross; Fung, James K; Hosseini, Maryam et al. (2017) Eye Control Deficits Coupled to Hand Control Deficits: Eye-Hand Incoordination in Chronic Cerebral Injury. Front Neurol 8:330
Rizzo, John-Ross; Hudson, Todd E; Abdou, Andrew et al. (2017) Disrupted Saccade Control in Chronic Cerebral Injury: Upper Motor Neuron-Like Disinhibition in the Ocular Motor System. Front Neurol 8:12
Sun, Peng; Landy, Michael S (2016) A Two-Stage Process Model of Sensory Discrimination: An Alternative to Drift-Diffusion. J Neurosci 36:11259-11274
Westrick, Zachary M; Heeger, David J; Landy, Michael S (2016) Pattern Adaptation and Normalization Reweighting. J Neurosci 36:9805-16
Hudson, Todd E; Landy, Michael S (2016) Sinusoidal error perturbation reveals multiple coordinate systems for sensorymotor adaptation. Vision Res 119:82-98

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