Visual Information Processing: Perception, Decision, Response Triplet

Author(s):  
Hasan Demirarslan ◽  
Yupo Chan ◽  
Michael Vidulich

In performing critical tasks, the reaction time of the decision maker may mean the difference between safety and hazard. While different people have different risk-taking behavior, the process by which they react to a stimulus is fundamentally similar. The process involves perception, decision, and response. Thus, the decision maker sees an outside stimulus, processes the information and arrives at a yes or no decision, and then takes the necessary physical steps to implement the decision. For example, a driver sees the onset of a yellow light, makes up his or her mind about stopping or running for the light, and accordingly steps on the brake or the gas pedal. We refer to perception, decision, and response as the fundamental “triplet” underlying any human performance in a simple or complex environment. Unless this triplet is understood, other behavioral models cannot be constructed with confidence. By observing the percentage of drivers that run for a light and stop for a light, the authors have shown that one can separately measure the perception, decision, and response times in terms of probability distributions. The proposed approach is illustrated for drivers at an intersection through a series of experiments. Preliminary results point to its applicability toward other human tasks, such as landing an aircraft.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Edward Armitage ◽  
Imre Lahdelma ◽  
Tuomas Eerola

The aim of the present study is to determine which acoustic components of harmonic consonance and dissonance influence automatic responses in a simple cognitive task. In a series of experiments, ten musical interval pairs were used to measure the influence of acoustic roughness and harmonicity on response times in an affective priming task conducted online. There was a significant correlation between the difference of roughness for each pair of intervals and a response time index. Harmonicity did not influence response times on the cognitive task. More detailed analysis suggests that the presence of priming in intervals is binary: in the negative primes that create congruency effects the intervals’ fundamentals and overtones coincide within the same equivalent rectangular bandwidth (i.e. the minor and major seconds). Intervals that fall outside this equivalent rectangular bandwidth do not elicit priming effects, regardless of their dissonance or cultural conventions of negative affect. The results are discussed in the context of recent developments in consonance/dissonance research and vocal similarity.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guy E. Hawkins ◽  
Birte U. Forstmann ◽  
Eric-Jan Wagenmakers ◽  
Scott D. Brown

1983 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 354-354
Author(s):  
Bruce W. Hamill ◽  
Robert A. Virzi

This investigation addresses the problem of attention in the processing of symbolic information from visual displays. Its scope includes the nature of attentive processes, the structural properties of stimuli that influence visual information processing mechanisms, and the manner in which these factors interact in perception. Our purpose is to determine the effects of configural feature structure on visual information processing. It is known that for stimuli comprising separable features, one can distinguish between conditions in which only one relevant feature differs among stimuli in the array being searched and conditions in which conjunctions of two (or more) features differ: Since the visual process of conjoining separable features is additive, this fact is reflected in search time as a function of array size, with feature conditions yielding flat curves associated with parallel search (no increase in search time across array sizes) and conjunction conditions yielding linearly increasing curves associated with serial search. We studied configural-feature stimuli within this framework to determine the nature of visual processing for such stimuli as a function of their feature structure. Response times of subjects searching for particular targets among structured arrays of distractors were measured in a speeded visual search task. Two different sets of stimulus materials were studied in array sizes of up to 32 stimuli, using both tachistoscope and microcomputer-based CRT presentation for each. Our results with configural stimuli indicate serial search in all of the conditions, with the slope of the response-time-by-array-size function being steeper for conjunction conditions than for feature conditions. However, for each of the two sets of stimuli we studied, there was one configuration that stood apart from the others in its set in that it yielded significantly faster response times, and in that conjunction conditions involving these particular stimuli tended to cluster with the feature conditions rather than with the other conjunction conditions. In addition to these major effects of particular targets, context effects also appeared in our results as effects of the various distractor sets used; certain of these context effects appear to be reversible. The effects of distractor sets on target search were studied in considerable detail. We have found interesting differences in visual processing between stimuli comprising separable features and those comprising configural features. We have also been able to characterize the effects we have found with configural-feature stimuli as being related to the specific feature structure of the target stimulus in the context of the specific feature structure of distractor stimuli. These findings have strong implications for the design of symbology that can enhance visual performance in the use of automated displays.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 5484-5490
Author(s):  
T van Daalen Wetters ◽  
M Macrae ◽  
M Brabant ◽  
A Sittler ◽  
P Coffino

The activity of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is negatively regulated by intracellular polyamines, which thereby mediate a form of feedback inhibition of the initial enzyme in the pathway of their synthesis. This phenomenon has been believed to result, at least in part, from translational regulation. To investigate this further, we performed four series of experiments. First, we found that a chimeric protein encoded by an mRNA containing the ODC 5' leader sequence did not exhibit polyamine-dependent regulation. Second, we showed that transcripts containing the protein-coding sequence of ODC, but no other ODC-derived sequence information, exhibited regulation. Third, we found that the association of ODC mRNA with ribosomes was not altered when intracellular polyamine levels were modulated under conditions previously deemed to cause translational regulation. Last, we carried out experiments to measure the incorporation of [35S]methionine into ODC in polyamine-starved and polyamine-replete cells. Differential incorporation diminished progressively as pulse-label times were shortened; at the shortest labeling time used (4 min), the difference in favor of ODC in polyamine-starved cells was less than twofold. These findings suggest that it is necessary to reevaluate the question of whether polyamines cause alterations of translation of ODC mRNA.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Han Zhang ◽  
Nicola C Anderson ◽  
Kevin Miller

Recent studies have shown that mind-wandering (MW) is associated with changes in eye movement parameters, but have not explored how MW affects the sequential pattern of eye movements involved in making sense of complex visual information. Eye movements naturally unfold over time and this process may reveal novel information about cognitive processing during MW. The current study used Recurrence Quantification Analysis (Anderson, Bischof, Laidlaw, Risko, & Kingstone, 2013) to describe the pattern of refixations (fixations directed to previously-inspected regions) during MW. Participants completed a real-world scene encoding task and responded to thought probes assessing intentional and unintentional MW. Both types of MW were associated with worse memory of the scenes. Importantly, RQA showed that scanpaths during unintentional MW were more repetitive than during on-task episodes, as indicated by a higher recurrence rate and more stereotypical fixation sequences. This increased repetitiveness suggests an adaptive response to processing failures through re-examining previous locations. Moreover, this increased repetitiveness contributed to fixations focusing on a smaller spatial scale of the stimuli. Finally, we were also able to validate several traditional measures: both intentional and unintentional MW were associated with fewer and longer fixations; Eye-blinking increased numerically during both types of MW but the difference was only significant for unintentional MW. Overall, the results advanced our understanding of how visual processing is affected during MW by highlighting the sequential aspect of eye movements.


Author(s):  
M. E. Golovkin

The article provides information about the program developed on the basis of the Qt environment, which allows positioning the original image of an object within the field of attention in order to simplify the procedure for generating object features that are invariant to shift, change scale, and rotate its image. Provides an overview of modern methods and software tools for scaling images. The algorithm of the program and a series of computational experiments is described. During the first series, the program positions the image of a triangle within the field of attention using various scaling methods. According to the results of this series, it was concluded which method of scaling an image of an object gives the least loss of quality. In other series of experiments, the program centers and scales the images of a square and a circle inside the attention field with different sizes of the attention field (selection frame) corresponding to a single image scaling factor. Following the results of each series of xperiments, measurements of the sizes of positioned objects were carried out and the dependence of the ratio of their areas on the scaling factor was established. The difference between the maximum and minimum ratio of the coefficients for each series of experiments is calculated. On the basis of the data obtained, it was concluded that for further work with segmented objects of the scene and their positioning in the field of attention, the size of the selection frame of 256x256 pixels can be considered reference.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 5484-5490 ◽  
Author(s):  
T van Daalen Wetters ◽  
M Macrae ◽  
M Brabant ◽  
A Sittler ◽  
P Coffino

The activity of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is negatively regulated by intracellular polyamines, which thereby mediate a form of feedback inhibition of the initial enzyme in the pathway of their synthesis. This phenomenon has been believed to result, at least in part, from translational regulation. To investigate this further, we performed four series of experiments. First, we found that a chimeric protein encoded by an mRNA containing the ODC 5' leader sequence did not exhibit polyamine-dependent regulation. Second, we showed that transcripts containing the protein-coding sequence of ODC, but no other ODC-derived sequence information, exhibited regulation. Third, we found that the association of ODC mRNA with ribosomes was not altered when intracellular polyamine levels were modulated under conditions previously deemed to cause translational regulation. Last, we carried out experiments to measure the incorporation of [35S]methionine into ODC in polyamine-starved and polyamine-replete cells. Differential incorporation diminished progressively as pulse-label times were shortened; at the shortest labeling time used (4 min), the difference in favor of ODC in polyamine-starved cells was less than twofold. These findings suggest that it is necessary to reevaluate the question of whether polyamines cause alterations of translation of ODC mRNA.


1984 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Kim Guenther

English-Persian bilingual subjects decided whether probes were true or false for some previously studied discourses written in either English or Persian. The response times to probes depicting explicit events were much faster when the probes were written in the same language as their discourses than when they were written in the other language. However, for probes depicting implicit or false events, the difference between response times to probes written in the same language and response times to probes written in the other language was substantially less. The results were consistent with the hypothesis that the form of the stored representation of the meaning of discourse is the same for both languages of the bilingual person.


1956 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 154-158
Author(s):  
William G. Corns

Either the free acid form or the sodium salt of Dalapon (2,2-dichloropropionic acid) and of TCA (trichloroacetic acid) and the sodium salt of 2,2,3-trichloropropionic acid (free acid not tested) were effective in improving the low temperature resistance of sugar beet seedlings grown in 4- and 8-p.p.m. solutions in the dark at 21 °C., and evaluated by short exposures to −10 °C. Isopropy-N(3-chlorophenyl) carbamate, amino triazole, sodium chloride, and trichlorobenzoic acid were ineffective in similar tests. In a series of experiments involving periodic sampling and freezing of Dalapon-treated illuminated sugar beet seedlings during a 24 day period of storage at 6 °C., the chemically treated plants were again superior to the comparable controls. The "cold-hardening" treatments tended to increase the magnitude of the difference between chemically treated and control plants. The amount of improvement was more variable in the tests with green plants than with those grown in the dark.


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