Results 11 to 20 of about 3,864 (188)

Cut of Clothes Maximizes the Effect of Amodal Completion to Make You Look Thinner [PDF]

open access: yesi-Perception, 2018
Amodal completion has various functional effects, including an apparent slimming effect achieved by clothes. Local and global completion factors have been examined in previous studies, which also apply to the apparent slimming effect.
Yoshie Kiritani   +2 more
doaj   +3 more sources

Amodal Completion of a Target Template Enhances Attentional Guidance in Visual Search [PDF]

open access: yesi-Perception, 2018
When searching for a target object in cluttered environments, our visual system appears to complete missing parts of occluded objects—a mechanism known as “amodal completion.” This study investigated how different variants of completion influence visual ...
Siyi Chen   +3 more
doaj   +3 more sources

An fMRI Dataset on Occluded Image Interpretation for Human Amodal Completion Research [PDF]

open access: yesScientific Data
In everyday environments, partially occluded objects are more common than fully visible ones. Despite their visual incompleteness, the human brain can reconstruct these objects to form coherent perceptual representations, a phenomenon referred to as ...
Bao Li   +8 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Image amodal completion: A survey

open access: yesComputer Vision and Image Understanding, 2023
Accepted at Computer Vision and Image Understanding.
Jiayang Ao   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Amodal completion in visual working memory [PDF]

open access: yesJournal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2016
Amodal completion refers to the perceptual “filling-in” of partly occluded object fragments. Previous work has shown that object completion occurs efficiently, at early perceptual stages of processing.
Chen, S., Conci, M., Muller, Hermann J.
core   +4 more sources

Separate cortical stages in amodal completion revealed by functional magnetic resonance adaptation [PDF]

open access: yesBMC Neuroscience, 2007
Background Objects in our environment are often partly occluded, yet we effortlessly perceive them as whole and complete. This phenomenon is called visual amodal completion. Psychophysical investigations suggest that the process of completion starts from
Singer Wolf, Weigelt Sarah, Muckli Lars
doaj   +2 more sources

Saturn and its Rings: Four Centuries of Imperfect Amodal Completion [PDF]

open access: yesi-Perception, 2019
The planet Saturn is a familiar image for us, but it presents perceptual peculiarities that impeded the discovery of its structure and which can still be misleading today.
Sergio Roncato
doaj   +2 more sources

Amodal Completion, Perception and Visual Imagery

open access: yesPhenomenology and Mind, 2016
Amodal completion typically occurs when we look at an object that is partially behind another object. Theorists often say that in such cases we are aware not only of the visible parts, but also, in some sense, of the occluded parts, because otherwise we ...
Clotilde Calabi
doaj   +3 more sources

Study Replication: Shape Discrimination in a Conditioning Procedure on the Jumping Spider Phidippus regius [PDF]

open access: yesAnimals, 2023
Spiders possess a unique visual system, split into eight different eyes and divided into two fully independent visual pathways. This peculiar organization begs the question of how visual information is processed, and whether the classically recognized ...
Eleonora Mannino   +3 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Visual Equivalence and Amodal Completion in Cuttlefish. [PDF]

open access: yesFront Physiol, 2017
Modern cephalopods are notably the most intelligent invertebrates and this is accompanied by keen vision. Despite extensive studies investigating the visual systems of cephalopods, little is known about their visual perception and object recognition.
Lin IR, Chiao CC.
europepmc   +4 more sources

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