'Breaking' position-invariant object recognition.

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While it is often assumed that objects can be recognized irrespective of where they fall on the retina, little is known about the mechanisms underlying this ability. By exposing human subjects to an altered world where some objects systematically changed identity during the transient blindness that accompanies eye movements, we induced predictable object confusions across retinal positions, effectively 'breaking' position invariance. Thus, position invariance is not a rigid property of vision but is constantly adapting to the statistics of the environment.
Nature neuroscience 8(9):1145-7, 2005 SepWho cited this? | PubMed ID: 16116453 | Fulltext


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