scholarly journals Disentangling bottom-up versus top-down and low-level versus high-level influences on eye movements over time

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heiko H. Schütt ◽  
Lars O. M. Rothkegel ◽  
Hans A. Trukenbrod ◽  
Ralf Engbert ◽  
Felix A. Wichmann
Author(s):  
Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni

AbstractMany observers worry that growing numbers of international institutions with overlapping functions undermine governance effectiveness via duplication, inconsistency and conflict. Such pessimistic assessments may undervalue the mechanisms available to states and other political agents to reduce conflictual overlap and enhance inter-institutional synergy. Drawing on historical data I examine how states can mitigate conflict within Global Governance Complexes (GGCs) by dissolving or merging existing institutions or by re-configuring their mandates. I further explore how “order in complexity” can emerge through bottom-up processes of adaptation in lieu of state-led reform. My analysis supports three theoretical claims: (1) states frequently refashion governance complexes “top-down” in order to reduce conflictual overlap; (2) “top-down” restructuring and “bottom-up” adaptation present alternative mechanisms for ordering relations among component institutions of GGCs; (3) these twin mechanisms ensure that GGCs tend to (re)produce elements of order over time–albeit often temporarily. Rather than evolving towards ever-greater fragmentation and disorder, complex governance systems thus tend to fluctuate between greater or lesser integration and (dis)order.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Ibrahim Mohammad Hussain Rahman

<p>The human visual attention system (HVA) encompasses a set of interconnected neurological modules that are responsible for analyzing visual stimuli by attending to those regions that are salient. Two contrasting biological mechanisms exist in the HVA systems; bottom-up, data-driven attention and top-down, task-driven attention. The former is mostly responsible for low-level instinctive behaviors, while the latter is responsible for performing complex visual tasks such as target object detection.  Very few computational models have been proposed to model top-down attention, mainly due to three reasons. The first is that the functionality of top-down process involves many influential factors. The second reason is that there is a diversity in top-down responses from task to task. Finally, many biological aspects of the top-down process are not well understood yet.  For the above reasons, it is difficult to come up with a generalized top-down model that could be applied to all high level visual tasks. Instead, this thesis addresses some outstanding issues in modelling top-down attention for one particular task, target object detection. Target object detection is an essential step for analyzing images to further perform complex visual tasks. Target object detection has not been investigated thoroughly when modelling top-down saliency and hence, constitutes the may domain application for this thesis.  The thesis will investigate methods to model top-down attention through various high-level data acquired from images. Furthermore, the thesis will investigate different strategies to dynamically combine bottom-up and top-down processes to improve the detection accuracy, as well as the computational efficiency of the existing and new visual attention models. The following techniques and approaches are proposed to address the outstanding issues in modelling top-down saliency:  1. A top-down saliency model that weights low-level attentional features through contextual knowledge of a scene. The proposed model assigns weights to features of a novel image by extracting a contextual descriptor of the image. The contextual descriptor plays the role of tuning the weighting of low-level features to maximize detection accuracy. By incorporating context into the feature weighting mechanism we improve the quality of the assigned weights to these features.  2. Two modules of target features combined with contextual weighting to improve detection accuracy of the target object. In this proposed model, two sets of attentional feature weights are learned, one through context and the other through target features. When both sources of knowledge are used to model top-down attention, a drastic increase in detection accuracy is achieved in images with complex backgrounds and a variety of target objects.  3. A top-down and bottom-up attention combination model based on feature interaction. This model provides a dynamic way for combining both processes by formulating the problem as feature selection. The feature selection exploits the interaction between these features, yielding a robust set of features that would maximize both the detection accuracy and the overall efficiency of the system.  4. A feature map quality score estimation model that is able to accurately predict the detection accuracy score of any previously novel feature map without the need of groundtruth data. The model extracts various local, global, geometrical and statistical characteristic features from a feature map. These characteristics guide a regression model to estimate the quality of a novel map.  5. A dynamic feature integration framework for combining bottom-up and top-down saliencies at runtime. If the estimation model is able to predict the quality score of any novel feature map accurately, then it is possible to perform dynamic feature map integration based on the estimated value. We propose two frameworks for feature map integration using the estimation model. The proposed integration framework achieves higher human fixation prediction accuracy with minimum number of feature maps than that achieved by combining all feature maps.  The proposed works in this thesis provide new directions in modelling top-down saliency for target object detection. In addition, dynamic approaches for top-down and bottom-up combination show considerable improvements over existing approaches in both efficiency and accuracy.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 1579-1600
Author(s):  
Lien De Cuyper ◽  
Bart Clarysse ◽  
Nelson Phillips

In this study, we build on the foundational observations of Selznick and Stinchcombe that organizations bear the lasting imprint of their founding context and explore how characteristics shaped during founding are coherently carried forward through time. To do so, we draw on an ethnography of a social venture where the entrepreneurs left soon after founding. In examining how an initial organizational imprint evolves beyond a venture’s founding phase, we focus on the actions and interactions of organizational members, the founders’ imprint, the venture’s new leadership, and the external environment. The process model we develop shows how the organizational imprint evolves as a consequence of the interplay between top-down and bottom-up forces. We first find that the initial imprint is transmitted through a bottom-up mechanism of imprint reinforcement, and second, that the venture is reimprinted after the founding period through two processes which we call imprint reforming and imprint coupling. The result of this is the formation of a sedimented imprint. Our findings further illuminate that, although the initial imprint sticks, its function and manifestation changes over time.


Perception ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 162-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Groner ◽  
A von Mühlenen ◽  
M Groner

An experiment was conducted to examine the influence of luminance, contrast, and spatial frequency content on saccadic eye movements. 112 pictures of natural textures from Brodatz were low-pass filtered (0.04 – 0.76 cycles deg−1) and high-pass filtered (1.91 – 19.56 cycles deg−1) and varied in luminance (low and high) and contrast (low and high), resulting in eight images per texture. Circular clippings of the central parts of the images (approximately 15% of the whole image) were used as stimuli. In the condition of bottom - up processing, the eight stimuli derived from one texture were presented for 1500 ms in a circular arrangement around the fixation cross. They were followed by a briefly presented target stimulus in the centre, which in half the trials was identical to one of the eight test stimuli. Participants had to decide whether the target stimulus was identical to any of the preceding stimuli. During a trial, their eye movements were recorded by means of a Dual-Purkinje-Image eye tracker. In the top - down condition, the target stimulus was presented in each trial prior to the display of the test stimulus. It was assumed that the priming with a target produced a top - down processing of the test stimuli. The latency and landing site of the first saccade were computed and compared between the top - down and bottom - up conditions. It is hypothesised that stimulus characteristics (luminance, contrast, and spatial frequency) play a more prominent role in bottom - up processing, while top - down processing is adjusted to the particular characteristics of the prime.


Perception ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mick Zeljko ◽  
Philip M. Grove

The stream-bounce effect refers to a bistable motion stimulus that is interpreted as two targets either “streaming” past or “bouncing” off one another, and the manipulations that bias responses. Directional bias, according to Bertenthal et al., is an account of the effect proposing that low-level motion integration promotes streaming, and its disruption leads to bouncing, and it is sometimes cited either directly in a bottom-up fashion or indirectly under top-down control despite Sekuler and Sekuler finding evidence inconsistent with it. We tested two key aspects of the hypothesis: (a) comparable changes in speed should produce comparable disruptions and lead to similar effects; and (b) speed changes alone should disrupt integration without the need for additional more complex changes of motion. We found that target motion influences stream-bounce perception, but not as directional bias predicts. Our results support Sekuler and Sekuler and argue against the low-level motion signals driving perceptual outcomes in stream-bounce displays (directly or indirectly) and point to higher level inferential processes involving perceptual history and expectation. Directional bias as a mechanism should be abandoned and either another specific bottom-up process must be proposed and tested or consideration should be given to top-down factors alone driving the effect.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 250-273
Author(s):  
Khotibul Umam

In this article the author traces the historic development of Islamic or sharia banking in Indonesia and this will be done by analysing the evolution of a series of successive laws promulgated over time.  From these laws (Law Nos. 7/1992; 10/1998 and 21/2008) we can discern, how over the years, the Indonesian government gradually accept and recognized sharia banking principles, resulting in the establishment of Sharia Banks alongside conventional Banks.  These successive laws also shows the gradual process of policy changes which involves a top-down, bottom up and again a top down approach. Through this process, Sharia Banks develops in Indonesia and has been able to meet society’s need not only for a modern banking system, but also more importantly, providing banking services in line with the sharia. 


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Hughes ◽  
Anne Moorhead

Abstract BackgroundOnline running communities are becoming increasingly prevalent within social media, and many groups have been exclusively established for female runners. The aim of this study was to investigate the wellbeing benefits and limitations of using Facebook running groups among women. MethodologyThe research design was a quantitative online survey. This survey was completed by 349 adult members of Facebook running groups for women. The online survey consisted of a validated scale, the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS), to calculate individual wellbeing scores. Data were analysed using SPSS, conducting descriptives, frequencies and correlations tests. ResultsThe results showed that 14% of participants’ scores indicated a high level of wellbeing, 66% had a wellbeing score in the moderate range and 21% of participants scored in the range of low-level wellbeing. Participants specified how they perceived women’s running Facebook groups to benefit or limit areas of wellbeing. Responses indicated perceived benefits to sense of optimism, interest in other people and sense of feeling good about themselves. There were negligible perceived wellbeing limitations. Members who had been running for the longest reported to engage more frequently with the groups, which may suggest their identities as runners have strengthened over time. ConclusionOverall, this study clearly found that women’s running Facebook groups can provide wellbeing benefits for their members.


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