Authors
Hirohito M Kondo, Anouk M van Loon, Jun-Ichiro Kawahara, Brian CJ Moore
Publication date
2017/2/19
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
372
Issue
1714
Pages
20160099
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
We perceive the world as stable and composed of discrete objects even though auditory and visual inputs are often ambiguous owing to spatial and temporal occluders and changes in the conditions of observation. This raises important questions regarding where and how ‘scene analysis’ is performed in the brain. Recent advances from both auditory and visual research suggest that the brain does not simply process the incoming scene properties. Rather, top-down processes such as attention, expectations and prior knowledge facilitate scene perception. Thus, scene analysis is linked not only with the extraction of stimulus features and formation and selection of perceptual objects, but also with selective attention, perceptual binding and awareness. This special issue covers novel advances in scene-analysis research obtained using a combination of psychophysics, computational modelling, neuroimaging and …
Total citations
201620172018201920202021202220232024146491752
Scholar articles
HM Kondo, AM van Loon, JI Kawahara, BCJ Moore - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2017
HM Kondo, AM van Loon, JI Kawahara, BCJ Moore - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2017