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      Affective Analysis of Professional and Amateur Abstract Paintings Using Statistical Analysis and Art Theory

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          Video Google: a text retrieval approach to object matching in videos

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            Visual correlates of fixation selection: effects of scale and time.

            What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question we recorded eye movements while observers viewed natural scenes, and recorded image characteristics centred at the locations that observers fixated. To investigate potential differences in the visual characteristics of fixated versus non-fixated locations, these images were transformed to make intensity, contrast, colour, and edge content explicit. Signal detection and information theoretic techniques were then used to compare fixated regions to those that were not. The presence of contrast and edge information was more strongly discriminatory than luminance or chromaticity. Fixated locations tended to be more distinctive in the high spatial frequencies. Extremes of low frequency luminance information were avoided. With prolonged viewing, consistency in fixation locations between observers decreased. In contrast to [Parkhurst, D. J., Law, K., & Niebur, E. (2002). Modeling the role of salience in the allocation of overt visual attention. Vision Research, 42 (1), 107-123] we found no change in the involvement of image features over time. We attribute this difference in our results to a systematic bias in their metric. We propose that saccade target selection involves an unchanging intermediate level representation of the scene but that the high-level interpretation of this representation changes over time.
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              Saliency, attention, and visual search: an information theoretic approach.

              A proposal for saliency computation within the visual cortex is put forth based on the premise that localized saliency computation serves to maximize information sampled from one's environment. The model is built entirely on computational constraints but nevertheless results in an architecture with cells and connectivity reminiscent of that appearing in the visual cortex. It is demonstrated that a variety of visual search behaviors appear as emergent properties of the model and therefore basic principles of coding and information transmission. Experimental results demonstrate greater efficacy in predicting fixation patterns across two different data sets as compared with competing models.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACM Transactions on Interactive Intelligent Systems
                ACM Trans. Interact. Intell. Syst.
                TiiS
                Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
                21606455
                July 09 2015
                June 30 2015
                : 5
                : 2
                : 1-27
                Article
                10.1145/2768209
                6325163d-df94-420a-a959-e58c302de269
                © 2015

                http://www.acm.org/publications/policies/copyright_policy#Background

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