Authors
Stephen Sebastian, Jared Abrams, Wilson S Geisler
Publication date
2017/7/11
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
114
Issue
28
Pages
E5731-E5740
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
A fundamental everyday visual task is to detect target objects within a background scene. Using relatively simple stimuli, vision science has identified several major factors that affect detection thresholds, including the luminance of the background, the contrast of the background, the spatial similarity of the background to the target, and uncertainty due to random variations in the properties of the background and in the amplitude of the target. Here we use an experimental approach based on constrained sampling from multidimensional histograms of natural stimuli, together with a theoretical analysis based on signal detection theory, to discover how these factors affect detection in natural scenes. We sorted a large collection of natural image backgrounds into multidimensional histograms, where each bin corresponds to a particular luminance, contrast, and similarity. Detection thresholds were measured for a subset of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Sebastian, J Abrams, WS Geisler - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2017