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Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation

It is well known that motion facilitates the visual perception of solid object shape, particularly when surface texture or other identifiable features (e.g., corners) are present. Conventional models of structure-from-motion require the presence of texture or identifiable object features in order to...

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Autores principales: Norman, J. Farley, Phillips, Flip, Cheeseman, Jacob R., Thomason, Kelsey E., Ronning, Cecilia, Behari, Kriti, Kleinman, Kayla, Calloway, Autum B., Lamirande, Davora
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4749382/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26863531
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149058
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author Norman, J. Farley
Phillips, Flip
Cheeseman, Jacob R.
Thomason, Kelsey E.
Ronning, Cecilia
Behari, Kriti
Kleinman, Kayla
Calloway, Autum B.
Lamirande, Davora
author_facet Norman, J. Farley
Phillips, Flip
Cheeseman, Jacob R.
Thomason, Kelsey E.
Ronning, Cecilia
Behari, Kriti
Kleinman, Kayla
Calloway, Autum B.
Lamirande, Davora
author_sort Norman, J. Farley
collection PubMed
description It is well known that motion facilitates the visual perception of solid object shape, particularly when surface texture or other identifiable features (e.g., corners) are present. Conventional models of structure-from-motion require the presence of texture or identifiable object features in order to recover 3-D structure. Is the facilitation in 3-D shape perception similar in magnitude when surface texture is absent? On any given trial in the current experiments, participants were presented with a single randomly-selected solid object (bell pepper or randomly-shaped “glaven”) for 12 seconds and were required to indicate which of 12 (for bell peppers) or 8 (for glavens) simultaneously visible objects possessed the same shape. The initial single object’s shape was defined either by boundary contours alone (i.e., presented as a silhouette), specular highlights alone, specular highlights combined with boundary contours, or texture. In addition, there was a haptic condition: in this condition, the participants haptically explored with both hands (but could not see) the initial single object for 12 seconds; they then performed the same shape-matching task used in the visual conditions. For both the visual and haptic conditions, motion (rotation in depth or active object manipulation) was present in half of the trials and was not present for the remaining trials. The effect of motion was quantitatively similar for all of the visual and haptic conditions–e.g., the participants’ performance in Experiment 1 was 93.5 percent higher in the motion or active haptic manipulation conditions (when compared to the static conditions). The current results demonstrate that deforming specular highlights or boundary contours facilitate 3-D shape perception as much as the motion of objects that possess texture. The current results also indicate that the improvement with motion that occurs for haptics is similar in magnitude to that which occurs for vision.
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spelling pubmed-47493822016-02-26 Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation Norman, J. Farley Phillips, Flip Cheeseman, Jacob R. Thomason, Kelsey E. Ronning, Cecilia Behari, Kriti Kleinman, Kayla Calloway, Autum B. Lamirande, Davora PLoS One Research Article It is well known that motion facilitates the visual perception of solid object shape, particularly when surface texture or other identifiable features (e.g., corners) are present. Conventional models of structure-from-motion require the presence of texture or identifiable object features in order to recover 3-D structure. Is the facilitation in 3-D shape perception similar in magnitude when surface texture is absent? On any given trial in the current experiments, participants were presented with a single randomly-selected solid object (bell pepper or randomly-shaped “glaven”) for 12 seconds and were required to indicate which of 12 (for bell peppers) or 8 (for glavens) simultaneously visible objects possessed the same shape. The initial single object’s shape was defined either by boundary contours alone (i.e., presented as a silhouette), specular highlights alone, specular highlights combined with boundary contours, or texture. In addition, there was a haptic condition: in this condition, the participants haptically explored with both hands (but could not see) the initial single object for 12 seconds; they then performed the same shape-matching task used in the visual conditions. For both the visual and haptic conditions, motion (rotation in depth or active object manipulation) was present in half of the trials and was not present for the remaining trials. The effect of motion was quantitatively similar for all of the visual and haptic conditions–e.g., the participants’ performance in Experiment 1 was 93.5 percent higher in the motion or active haptic manipulation conditions (when compared to the static conditions). The current results demonstrate that deforming specular highlights or boundary contours facilitate 3-D shape perception as much as the motion of objects that possess texture. The current results also indicate that the improvement with motion that occurs for haptics is similar in magnitude to that which occurs for vision. Public Library of Science 2016-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4749382/ /pubmed/26863531 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149058 Text en © 2016 Norman et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Norman, J. Farley
Phillips, Flip
Cheeseman, Jacob R.
Thomason, Kelsey E.
Ronning, Cecilia
Behari, Kriti
Kleinman, Kayla
Calloway, Autum B.
Lamirande, Davora
Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation
title Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation
title_full Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation
title_fullStr Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation
title_full_unstemmed Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation
title_short Perceiving Object Shape from Specular Highlight Deformation, Boundary Contour Deformation, and Active Haptic Manipulation
title_sort perceiving object shape from specular highlight deformation, boundary contour deformation, and active haptic manipulation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4749382/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26863531
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149058
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