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Adaptive filtering in spatial vision: evidence from feature marking in plaids
Authors:Georgeson M A  Meese T S
Institution:Cognitive Science Research Centre, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, UK. m.a.georgeson@bham.ac.uk
Abstract:Much evidence shows that early vision employs an array of spatial filters tuned for different spatial frequencies and orientations. We suggest that for moderately low spatial frequencies these preliminary filters are not treated independently, but are used to perform grouping and segmentation in the patchwise Fourier domain. For example, consider a stationary plaid made from two superimposed sinusoidal gratings of the same contrast and spatial frequency oriented +/- 45 degrees from vertical. Most of the energy in a wavelet-like (e.g. simple-cell) transform of this stimulus is in the oblique orientations, but typically it looks like a compound structure containing blurred vertical and horizontal edges. This checkerboard structure corresponds with the locations of zero crossings in the output of an isotropic (circular) filter, synthesised from the linear sum of a set of oriented basis-filters (Georgeson, 1992 Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B 249 235-245). However, the addition of a third harmonic in square-wave phase causes almost complete perceptual segmentation of the plaid into two overlapping oblique gratings. Here we confirm this result psychophysically using a feature-marking technique, and argue that this perceptual segmentation cannot be understood in terms of the zero crossings marked in the output of any static linear filter that is sensitive to all of the plaid's components. If it is assumed that zero crossings or similar are an appropriate feature-primitive in human vision, our results require a flexible process that combines and segments early basis-filters according to prevailing image conditions. Thus, we suggest that combination and segmentation of spatial filters in the patchwise Fourier domain underpins the perceptual segmentation observed in our experiments. Under this kind of image-processing scheme, registration across spatial scales occurs at the level of spatial filters, before features are extracted. This contrasts with many previous schemes where feature correspondence is required between spatial edge-maps at different spatial scales.
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