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Article Dans Une Revue NeuroReport Année : 2005

Rapid categorization of natural scenes in monkeys: target predictability and processing speed.

Résumé

Three monkeys performed a categorization task and a recognition task with briefly flashed natural images, using in alternation either a large variety of familiar target images (animal or food) or a single (totally predictable) target. The processing time was 20 ms shorter in the recognition task in which false alarms showed that monkeys relied on low-level cues (color, form, orientation, etc.). The 20-ms additional delay necessary in monkeys to perform the categorization task is compared with the 40-ms delay previously found for humans performing similar tasks. With such short additional processing time, it is argued that neither monkeys nor humans have time to develop a fully integrated object representation in the categorization task and must rely on coarse intermediate representations.
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Dates et versions

hal-00330512 , version 1 (14-10-2008)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-00330512 , version 1
  • PUBMED : 15729136

Citer

Marc J-M Macé, Ghislaine Richard, Arnaud Delorme, Michèle Fabre-Thorpe. Rapid categorization of natural scenes in monkeys: target predictability and processing speed.. NeuroReport, 2005, 16 (4), pp.349-54. ⟨hal-00330512⟩
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