The role of pictorial convention in haptic picture perception.
Identifieur interne : 001B94 ( PubMed/Corpus ); précédent : 001B93; suivant : 001B95The role of pictorial convention in haptic picture perception.
Auteurs : Leanne J. Thompson ; Edward P. Chronicle ; Alan F. CollinsSource :
- Perception [ 0301-0066 ] ; 2003.
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- MESH :
- methods : Physical Stimulation.
- psychology : Blindness.
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Middle Aged, Psychophysics, Sensory Deprivation, Stereognosis.
Abstract
An investigation of tactile picture perception is reported. Blindfolded sighted subjects explored either 'line drawings' or 'textured' tactile pictures produced on Zytex swell paper. All pictures were 'two-dimensional', that is they depicted only one object face and so did not represent a third dimension. Both picture sets represented the same objects. Results revealed that the textured pictures, in which solid surfaces of depicted objects were uniformly textured, were recognised more often than tactile line drawings, in which surfaces of objects were simply bounded by lines. There were no significant correlations between imagery ability (visual, cutaneous, or kinaesthetic) and picture recognition success. Texture may be a form of 'uniform connectedness' (Palmer and Rock 1994 Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 1 29-55) or 'common region' (Palmer 1992 Cognitive Psychology 24 436-447), highlighting the global characteristics of stimuli. We argue that textured pictures may encourage the haptic system to take a more globally oriented approach to tactile picture perception, benefiting recognition.
PubMed: 12974573
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pubmed:12974573Le document en format XML
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<author><name sortKey="Chronicle, Edward P" sort="Chronicle, Edward P" uniqKey="Chronicle E" first="Edward P" last="Chronicle">Edward P. Chronicle</name>
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<author><name sortKey="Collins, Alan F" sort="Collins, Alan F" uniqKey="Collins A" first="Alan F" last="Collins">Alan F. Collins</name>
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<term>Physical Stimulation (methods)</term>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">An investigation of tactile picture perception is reported. Blindfolded sighted subjects explored either 'line drawings' or 'textured' tactile pictures produced on Zytex swell paper. All pictures were 'two-dimensional', that is they depicted only one object face and so did not represent a third dimension. Both picture sets represented the same objects. Results revealed that the textured pictures, in which solid surfaces of depicted objects were uniformly textured, were recognised more often than tactile line drawings, in which surfaces of objects were simply bounded by lines. There were no significant correlations between imagery ability (visual, cutaneous, or kinaesthetic) and picture recognition success. Texture may be a form of 'uniform connectedness' (Palmer and Rock 1994 Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 1 29-55) or 'common region' (Palmer 1992 Cognitive Psychology 24 436-447), highlighting the global characteristics of stimuli. We argue that textured pictures may encourage the haptic system to take a more globally oriented approach to tactile picture perception, benefiting recognition.</div>
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<Abstract><AbstractText>An investigation of tactile picture perception is reported. Blindfolded sighted subjects explored either 'line drawings' or 'textured' tactile pictures produced on Zytex swell paper. All pictures were 'two-dimensional', that is they depicted only one object face and so did not represent a third dimension. Both picture sets represented the same objects. Results revealed that the textured pictures, in which solid surfaces of depicted objects were uniformly textured, were recognised more often than tactile line drawings, in which surfaces of objects were simply bounded by lines. There were no significant correlations between imagery ability (visual, cutaneous, or kinaesthetic) and picture recognition success. Texture may be a form of 'uniform connectedness' (Palmer and Rock 1994 Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 1 29-55) or 'common region' (Palmer 1992 Cognitive Psychology 24 436-447), highlighting the global characteristics of stimuli. We argue that textured pictures may encourage the haptic system to take a more globally oriented approach to tactile picture perception, benefiting recognition.</AbstractText>
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