Temporal properties of amodal completion: Influences of knowledge
•We measured knowledge effects in amodal completion using a primed matching task.•Knowledge appears to take an effect in amodal completion after 150 ms prime duration.•This effect further increases with prime durations of 500 ms. We studied the influence of knowledge in the interpretation of partly...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Vision research (Oxford) 2018-04, Vol.145, p.21-30 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •We measured knowledge effects in amodal completion using a primed matching task.•Knowledge appears to take an effect in amodal completion after 150 ms prime duration.•This effect further increases with prime durations of 500 ms.
We studied the influence of knowledge in the interpretation of partly occluded objects. In the past decades, amodal completion has often been studied by using abstract, meaningless outlines of rather stylistic, geometric shapes. It has been recognized that smooth continuation of partly occluded contours behind an occluding surface is a strong completion tendency. In the current study we contrast this structurally driven completion tendency with knowledge driven tendencies. We used a set of partly occluded well-known objects for which structure-based completions and knowledge-based completions resulted in either the same or different interpretations. We adopted the behavioural primed matching paradigm to measure differential priming effects due to these completion tendencies. Our results implied differential temporal properties for structure-based and knowledge-based effects during perception of partly occluded objects. Interestingly, knowledge has an influence as early as 150 ms after the onset of the prime. |
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ISSN: | 0042-6989 1878-5646 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.visres.2018.02.011 |