Research on target detection probability model based on headwear eye tracker

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hu He ◽  
Fang Zhang ◽  
Longlong Chen ◽  
Mingming Liu ◽  
Jingjun Yuan ◽  
...  
Crustaceana ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 88 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 911-922 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeo Yamamoto ◽  
Tatsuya Yamada ◽  
Takahiro Kinoshita ◽  
Yuji Ueda ◽  
Hiroshi Fujimoto ◽  
...  

Growth and moulting of wild-born immature snow crabs (Chionoecetes opilio (Fabricius, 1788)) were investigated by laboratory culture experiments. Crabs with 16.2-42.9 mm carapace width caught from the Sea of Japan were cultured at a temperature of their natural habitat (approximately 1°C). The growth indices (size increments at moulting in mm and in % of premoult carapace width) and intermoult period were significantly affected by premoult carapace width, but sex did not affect these variables. Furthermore, we demonstrated that premoult carapace width and days after moulting significantly affected moulting probability and we developed a moulting probability model based on these variables. From this model, the number of days of intermoult periods when moults occurred in 50% of crabs of instars VI, VII and VIII was estimated at 234, 284 and 346 days, respectively.


Perception ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 1267-1286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce Schneider ◽  
Giampaolo Moraglia

In previous studies the authors have shown that the enhanced detectability exhibited by stereoscopically viewed targets can be accounted for by assuming that the binocular system can linearly summate the left-eye and right-eye views of a visual scene. A model based upon this assumption leads to a variety of predictions concerning the detectability of noise-embedded targets. One such prediction is that the detectability of a target in these conditions is highly orientation specific. A test is reported of such a prediction that can be regarded as counterintuitive: namely, that the detectability, under stereoscopic viewing conditions, of a patch of sinusoidal grating masked by Gaussian noise should change substantially when the grating, oriented at 45°, is rotated until its orientation becomes −45°. The implications of these results for an understanding of the phenomenon of camouflage breaking are discussed.


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