Further Explorations of Expert Object Recognition - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Further Explorations of Expert Object Recognition

Description:

... activation was limited to medio-occipital regions, in experts the car-activation ... a large portion of the occipital cortex and extending to posterior ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:106
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: danny95
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Further Explorations of Expert Object Recognition


1
Further Explorations of Expert Object Recognition
  • Assaf Harel
  • Department of Psychology,
  • Hebrew University, Jerusalem

2
Acknowledgements
  • Prof. Shlomo Bentin
  • Prof. Rafael Malach
  • Yulia Golland

3
What is Expert Object Recognition?
  • Experts have more experience with and are
  • more knowledgeable about objects
  • in their domain of expertise.
  • Theoretical question What role does
  • experience play in the object recognition
  • system?
  • 1) Cognitive substrate
  • 2) Neural substrate

4
Expertise a downward shift to subordinate
level.But, what type of processing is needed
for subordinate level (expert) identification?
5
And Then Came Faces The Face Expertise Model
  • Are faces special?
  • Object recognition is domain general. Face and
    object processing should not be functionally
    independent. Faces are an example of stimuli
    which observers have gained natural expertise
    with.
  • Therefore, according to this hypothesis experts
    in any kind of object recognition will show
    face-specific effects.

6
Neuroimaging Findings
  • Gauthier et al. (2000) suggested that FFA, a
    region which shows preferential activation for
    faces, can also be activated while bird and car
    experts viewed objects in their domain of
    expertise.
  • FFA activation was also found for laboratory
    created expertise with Greebles (Gauthier et al.,
    1999).

7
Focus of Present Research
  • Expert object recognition in and of itself,
    independent of the domain specificity/expertise
    debate.
  • Research question How is expert object
    recognition expressed in the brain?
  • Are there any other expertise areas, except for
    the FFA?
  • How early in the visual stream can we find
    expertise effects?
  • Expertise-specific areas or a network of
    expertise?

8
Selection of Car experts
  • 14 car experts (all males, mean age 27) were
    selected based on their performance on a car
    discrimination task.
  • Participants had to determine whether two cars
    were of the same model (within maker) varying in
    year, color, and orientation. Their accuracy (d)
    on this task was 1.39 compared with a group of 20
    novices whose accuracy was 0.57 (t(32)7.72,
    plt0.01).
  • In a similar recognition task, with a different
    object category (airplanes), experts were as
    accurate as novices (0.67 and 0.43, respectively,
    t(32)1.72, p0.09).

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
Methods
  • Participants 9 car experts (males, mean age 23)
    and 10 novices (males, mean age 25).
  • 1.5-T Signa Horizon LX 8.25 GE scanner of the Tel
    Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.
  • fMRI parameters Gradient EPI sequence (TR3000
    ms, TE55 ms, FOV240x240 mm, matrix size 80x80,
    slice thickness4 mm, 1 mm gap, 27 axial slices).
  • T1-weighted high resolution (1x1x1 mm) anatomic
    images and a whole-brain SPGR sequence.

12
fMRI Experiment
  • Three scans
  • 2 experimental scans (faces, cars, airplanes)
  • One-back memory task
  • External localizer (faces, houses, tools,
    geometric patterns)
  • One-back covert memory task

13
All stimuli were equiluminant
14
Experimental Design
15
Results Group Activation Maps
Experts
Novices
Faces gt Houses
16
Novices
Cars gt Airplanes
17
Experts
Cars gt Airplanes
18
Experts
Novices
Cars gt Airplanes
19
  • FFA was activated by faces in experts and
    novices. FFA was not preferentially activated in
    car experts while viewing cars.
  • In contrast to faces, the pattern of activation
    elicited by cars was different for experts and
    novices.
  • Whereas in novices, activation was limited to
    medio-occipital regions, in experts the
    car-activation was wide-spread, distributed over
    a large portion of the occipital cortex and
    extending to posterior regions of the inferior
    temporal lobe.

20
ROI Analysis
  • Four ROIs were defined using the external
    localizer
  • FFA defined by the contrast Faces vs. Houses.
  • LO - defined by the contrast Tools vs. Textures.
  • CoS - defined by the contrast Houses vs. Faces.
  • Early visual areas - defined by the contrast
    Textures vs. all other object categories.

21
ROI Analysis Results


22


23
  • The analysis of the pre-defined ROIs revealed no
    difference between car-activation in experts and
    novices neither in the FFA nor in the LO.
  • In early visual areas, equivalent activation was
    found across categories in novices, while in
    experts cars elicited significantly higher
    activation than faces and airplanes. A similar
    trend was found in the CoS.

24
What Can We Learn About Expert Object Recognition?
  • The neural substrates of car expertise are not
    equivalent to those of face expertise.
  • Expert object recognition is distributed and not
    restricted to a specific hot spot such as the
    FFA.
  • Expert object recognition in different domains
    recruits different brain regions.
  • Is face recognition the right model for expert
    object recognition?

25
  • Alternative explanation the extent of activity
    for objects of expertise (such as cars), which is
    not seen for faces, might indicate general
    alertness/arousal (emotional reaction?)
    superimposed on peculiar perceptual processes.

26
Mourao-Miranda et al. (Neuroimage, 2003)
27
What Can We Learn About Expert Object Recognition?
  • The results suggest a notion of a dedicated
    expert object recognition network, whereby early
    vision is top-down modulated according to
    differential recognition goals.
  • Theoretical framework Reverse Hierarchy Theory
    (Ahissar Hochstein, TiCS 2004)

28
Hochstein Ahissar, 2002Ahissar Hochstein,
2004
29
  • In situations requiring better signal-to-noise
    ratio (such as discriminating among similar
    members of the same class) highly-trained
    performers, who have had a great deal of training
    experience, base their performance on low-level
    representations guided by top-down activated
    pathways.
  • In the present study, this model manifests in the
    car selective activation found in early visual
    areas of car experts and in the extensive pattern
    of activation for objects of expertise.

30
Future Research
  • Neuroimaging studies manipulating
    alertness/interest/arousal.
  • Behavioral measures manipulating low- level
    processing.
  • Temporal dynamics of low-level processing vs.
    high-level processing in experts.

31
RHT and Perceptual Learning
  • Perceptual Learning practice-induced
    improvement in the ability to perform specific
    perceptual tasks.
  • Perceptual learning improvement largely stems
    from a gradual top-down guided increase in
    usability in first high and then lower-level
    task-relevant information.
  • This process is subserved by a cascade of
    top-to-bottom level modifications that enhance
    task-relevant, and prune irrelevant, information.

32
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com