Processing scene context: fast categorization and object interference.

PubWeight™: 1.67‹?› | Rank: Top 3%

🔗 View Article (PMID 17967472)

Published in Vision Res on October 29, 2007

Authors

Olivier R Joubert1, Guillaume A Rousselet, Denis Fize, Michèle Fabre-Thorpe

Author Affiliations

1: Université, Toulouse 3, CerCo, UPS, France. olivier.joubert@cerco.ups-tlse.fr

Articles citing this

Informatics in radiology: what can you see in a single glance and how might this guide visual search in medical images? Radiographics (2012) 2.21

Recognition of natural scenes from global properties: seeing the forest without representing the trees. Cogn Psychol (2008) 2.18

The briefest of glances: the time course of natural scene understanding. Psychol Sci (2009) 2.04

Real-world scene representations in high-level visual cortex: it's the spaces more than the places. J Neurosci (2011) 1.93

Visual search in scenes involves selective and nonselective pathways. Trends Cogn Sci (2011) 1.68

Modeling Search for People in 900 Scenes: A combined source model of eye guidance. Vis cogn (2009) 1.33

Social context influences recognition of bodily expressions. Exp Brain Res (2010) 1.19

Deconstructing visual scenes in cortex: gradients of object and spatial layout information. Cereb Cortex (2012) 1.19

The time-course of visual categorizations: you spot the animal faster than the bird. PLoS One (2009) 1.19

Visual search for arbitrary objects in real scenes. Atten Percept Psychophys (2011) 1.19

Parametric Coding of the Size and Clutter of Natural Scenes in the Human Brain. Cereb Cortex (2014) 1.06

The characteristics and limits of rapid visual categorization. Front Psychol (2011) 1.04

When categories collide: accumulation of information about multiple categories in rapid scene perception. Psychol Sci (2011) 0.98

The gist of the abnormal: above-chance medical decision making in the blink of an eye. Psychon Bull Rev (2013) 0.94

Humans and monkeys share visual representations. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2011) 0.92

Visual prediction and perceptual expertise. Int J Psychophysiol (2011) 0.91

Animal detection precedes access to scene category. PLoS One (2012) 0.88

Key visual features for rapid categorization of animals in natural scenes. Front Psychol (2010) 0.85

Ultra rapid object categorization: effects of level, animacy and context. PLoS One (2013) 0.84

A hierarchical probabilistic model for rapid object categorization in natural scenes. PLoS One (2011) 0.83

The nature of expertise in fingerprint matching: experts can do a lot with a little. PLoS One (2014) 0.81

The resilience of object predictions: early recognition across viewpoints and exemplars. Psychon Bull Rev (2014) 0.80

Global image properties do not guide visual search. J Vis (2011) 0.80

Contextual influences on rapid object categorization in natural scenes. Brain Res (2011) 0.79

Statistics of high-level scene context. Front Psychol (2013) 0.79

Beyond gist: strategic and incremental information accumulation for scene categorization. Psychol Sci (2014) 0.78

Fast and Famous: Looking for the Fastest Speed at Which a Face Can be Recognized. Front Psychol (2013) 0.78

The Effects of Age and Set Size on the Fast Extraction of Egocentric Distance. Vis cogn (2016) 0.78

The Temporal Dynamics of Scene Processing: A Multifaceted EEG Investigation. eNeuro (2016) 0.77

Visual scenes are categorized by function. J Exp Psychol Gen (2016) 0.77

Rapid gist perception of meaningful real-life scenes: Exploring individual and gender differences in multiple categorization tasks. Iperception (2015) 0.77

Recognition and memory for briefly presented scenes. Front Psychol (2012) 0.76

The influence of a scene preview on eye movement behavior in natural scenes. Psychon Bull Rev (2016) 0.76

Do simultaneously viewed objects influence scene recognition individually or as groups? Two perceptual studies. PLoS One (2014) 0.76

Understanding scene understanding. Front Psychol (2013) 0.76

Explaining the Timing of Natural Scene Understanding with a Computational Model of Perceptual Categorization. PLoS Comput Biol (2015) 0.76

Making Sense of Real-World Scenes. Trends Cogn Sci (2016) 0.76

Ultra-Rapid Categorization of Meaningful Real-Life Scenes in Adults With and Without ASD. J Autism Dev Disord (2016) 0.76

The influence of scene context on object recognition is independent of attentional focus. Front Psychol (2013) 0.75

The Influence of Task-Irrelevant Flankers Depends on the Composition of Emotion Categories. Front Psychol (2016) 0.75

Scene categorization in Alzheimer's disease: a saccadic choice task. Dement Geriatr Cogn Dis Extra (2015) 0.75

Contextual Congruency Effect in Natural Scene Categorization: Different Strategies in Humans and Monkeys (Macaca mulatta). PLoS One (2015) 0.75

A view not to be missed: Salient scene content interferes with cognitive restoration. PLoS One (2017) 0.75

Object segmentation controls image reconstruction from natural scenes. PLoS Biol (2017) 0.75

Articles by these authors

Repeated fMRI using iron oxide contrast agent in awake, behaving macaques at 3 Tesla. Neuroimage (2002) 2.05

Stereopsis activates V3A and caudal intraparietal areas in macaques and humans. Neuron (2003) 1.97

Robust correlation analyses: false positive and power validation using a new open source matlab toolbox. Front Psychol (2013) 1.76

Parallel processing in high-level categorization of natural images. Nat Neurosci (2002) 1.75

The processing of visual shape in the cerebral cortex of human and nonhuman primates: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. J Neurosci (2004) 1.50

Vocal attractiveness increases by averaging. Curr Biol (2010) 1.41

Is it an animal? Is it a human face? Fast processing in upright and inverted natural scenes. J Vis (2003) 1.38

The time course of visual processing: backward masking and natural scene categorisation. Vision Res (2005) 1.36

LIMO EEG: a toolbox for hierarchical LInear MOdeling of ElectroEncephaloGraphic data. Comput Intell Neurosci (2011) 1.36

Interaction of top-down and bottom-up processing in the fast visual analysis of natural scenes. Brain Res Cogn Brain Res (2004) 1.28

Similarities and differences in motion processing between the human and macaque brain: evidence from fMRI. Neuropsychologia (2003) 1.26

How parallel is visual processing in the ventral pathway? Trends Cogn Sci (2004) 1.26

The time-course of visual categorizations: you spot the animal faster than the bird. PLoS One (2009) 1.19

Brain classification reveals the right cerebellum as the best biomarker of dyslexia. BMC Neurosci (2009) 1.11

Animal and human faces in natural scenes: How specific to human faces is the N170 ERP component? J Vis (2004) 1.07

Rapid visual categorization of natural scene contexts with equalized amplitude spectrum and increasing phase noise. J Vis (2009) 1.06

Controlling interstimulus perceptual variance does not abolish N170 face sensitivity. Nat Neurosci (2007) 1.05

Early interference of context congruence on object processing in rapid visual categorization of natural scenes. J Vis (2008) 1.04

Inverting faces elicits sensitivity to race on the N170 component: a cross-cultural study. J Vis (2010) 1.02

Neural repetition suppression to identity is abolished by other-race faces. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2010) 1.01

Visual activation in prefrontal cortex is stronger in monkeys than in humans. J Cogn Neurosci (2004) 0.99

Robust statistics show no evidence for a relationship between fiber density and memory performance. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2011) 0.98

Single-trial analyses: why bother? Front Psychol (2011) 0.97

Processing of one, two or four natural scenes in humans: the limits of parallelism. Vision Res (2004) 0.97

Electrophysiological evidence for an early processing of human voices. BMC Neurosci (2009) 0.94

How do amplitude spectra influence rapid animal detection? Vision Res (2009) 0.94

Humans and monkeys share visual representations. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2011) 0.92

Reliability of ERP and single-trial analyses. Neuroimage (2011) 0.90

Spotting animals in natural scenes: efficiency of humans and monkeys at very low contrasts. Anim Cogn (2009) 0.89

Rapid categorization of natural scenes in monkeys: target predictability and processing speed. Neuroreport (2005) 0.89

Animal detection precedes access to scene category. PLoS One (2012) 0.88

Rapid categorization of achromatic natural scenes: how robust at very low contrasts? Eur J Neurosci (2005) 0.88

Stimulus duration and diversity do not reverse the advantage for superordinate-level representations: the animal is seen before the bird. Eur J Neurosci (2014) 0.86

Early ERPs to faces: aging, luminance, and individual differences. Front Psychol (2013) 0.84

Effects of task requirements on rapid natural scene processing: from common sensory encoding to distinct decisional mechanisms. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform (2007) 0.84

The temporal interplay between conscious and unconscious perceptual streams. Curr Biol (2009) 0.84

Early ERPs to faces and objects are driven by phase, not amplitude spectrum information: evidence from parametric, test-retest, single-subject analyses. J Vis (2012) 0.84

Taking the MAX from neuronal responses. Trends Cogn Sci (2003) 0.83

Rapid categorization of foveal and extrafoveal natural images: associated ERPs and effects of lateralization. Brain Cogn (2005) 0.82

Spatiotemporal analyses of the N170 for human faces, animal faces and objects in natural scenes. Neuroreport (2004) 0.81