L9 - Visual Appearances Flashcards
What does it mean to perceive?
- Link to the world, inner & outer
- Provides a sense of what’s real & what ‘exists’
- Links what we experience to how it maps to reality
- All animals that exist have a sensory system
What is the concept of “Unwelt”?
Umwelt - self-centred world - unique for each animal
- Different animals have very different experiences of what the world is like, both in space and in time
- e.g. Bird have 4 cone types
- e.g. Snakes can sense IR light so can follow warm-blooded animals
- Need to understand an animals experiences about the world to understand it’s behaviours & understand behavioural tasks
- Different species have developed different adaptations that require different kinds of information = Different types of intelligence?
What are the two functional roles for vision?
- Control of behaviour/action
- Recognition and awareness of the ‘world’ (visual experience)
What is light?
- Light is a form of radiation
- Vision involves using the patterns in light (spatio-temporal structure) to extract properties of the world
- The structure in the light that conveys information about the properties of the world = Ecological optics
What are the different ‘levels’ of visual processing
- ****Low-level -**** Involves the encoding and transduction of image: their spatial, chromatic and temporal structure - only the encoding of the retinal image (brain wants to know what caused the image in the world)
- ****Mid-level**** - First stage where properties of environment are made explicit: the shapes, material properties, and coherence of substances and surfaces in the world (not just images only)
- **High-level** - The semantic interpretations of sense, such as object recognition, categorization or classification
What are the different factors create the structure in light that reaches our eyes?
Three-dimensional shape (change in surface pose relative to the light source)
- Reflectance and transmittance properties (colour, lightness, translucency, gloss) - How light bounces off an object
- Colour & lightness
- In order to extract the lightness or colour of an object in the world, you need to know what the light source is like (its wavelength composition and intensity)
- Colour isn’t just about sensing the wavelengths of light that are in the image
- Transparency
- Translucency and sub-surface scattering
- Sub-surface scattering - light bounces around within an object
- Gloss
- Illumination (intensity, spectral content, shadows)
- Shadows
- Blueish tinge of shadows caused by warmer light nearby
- Occlusion
- Partial occlusion - Problem of completion (amodal completion)
- Border ownership - Not the animal ending but the object in front - Cephalopods are masters at camouflage - Optics of the eye
How does light interact with objects?
- Light interacts with objects and materials
- These interactions generate the structure in images - Need to understand what they convey about the world
- There are a number of physically independent sources of light-material interactions that was seem to be sensitive to (shape, colour, lightness, gloss (‘shiny-ness’), texture, and opacity/translucency).
What is the problem of visual experience?
- Brains have to try and figure out what’s in the world from the light that reaches our eyes
- But images are 2D & a lot of different factors that affect the structure in the images are mixed together