VISUAL-SEARCH, VISUAL STREAMS, AND VISUAL ARCHITECTURES

被引:40
作者
GREEN, M
机构
[1] Computer Studies Programme, Trent University, Peterborough, K9J7 B8, Ontario
来源
PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS | 1991年 / 50卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.3758/BF03212232
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Most psychological, physiological, and computational models of early vision suggest that retinal information is divided into a parallel set of feature modules. The dominant theories of visual search assume that these modules form a "blackboard" architecture: a set of independent representations that communicate only through a central processor. A review of research shows that blackboard-based theories, such as feature-integration theory, cannot easily explain the existing data. The experimental evidence is more consistent with a "network" architecture, which stresses that: (1) feature modules are directly connected to one another, (2) features and their locations are represented together, (3) feature detection and integration are not distinct processing stages, and (4) no executive control process, such as focal attention, is needed to integrate features. Attention is not a spotlight that synthesizes objects from raw features. Instead, it is better to conceptualize attention as an aperture which masks irrelevant visual information.
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页码:388 / 403
页数:16
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