Abstract
Affective/cognitive engineering investigations typically require the quantitative assessment of object perception. Recent research has suggested that certain perceptions of object categorization can be derived from human eye fixation and that color images and line drawings induce similar neural activities. Line drawings contain less information than color images; therefore, line drawings are expected to simplify the investigations of object perception. The psychological potential field (PPF), which is a psychological feature, is an image feature of line drawings. On the basis of the PPF, the possibility that the general human perception of object categorization can be assessed from the similarity to fixation maps (FMs) generated from human eye fixations has been reported. However, this may be due to chance because image features other than the PPF have not been compared with FMs. This study examines the potential and effectiveness of the PPF by comparing its performance with that of other image features in terms of the similarity to FMs. The results show that the PPF shows the ideal performance for assessing the perception of object categorization. In particular, the PPF effectively distinguishes between animal and nonanimal targets; however, real-time assessment is difficult.
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