Authors
Mark W Schurgin, Jonathan I Flombaum
Publication date
2018/8
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Volume
44
Issue
8
Pages
1216
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Human visual memory is tolerant, meaning that it supports object recognition despite variability across encounters at the image level. Tolerant object recognition remains one capacity in which artificial intelligence trails humans. Typically, tolerance is described as a property of human visual long-term memory (VLTM). In contrast, visual working memory (VWM) is not usually ascribed a role in tolerant recognition, with tests of that system usually demanding discriminatory power—identifying changes, not sameness. There are good reasons to expect that VLTM is more tolerant; functionally, recognition over the long-term must accommodate the fact that objects will not be viewed under identical conditions; and practically, the passive and massive nature of VLTM may impose relatively permissive criteria for thinking that two inputs are the same. But empirically, tolerance has never been compared across working and long …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MW Schurgin, JI Flombaum - … of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and …, 2018