Abstract

Because the environment is cluttered, objects rarely appear in isolation. The visual system must therefore attentionally select behaviorally relevant objects from among many irrelevant ones. A limit on our ability to select individual objects is revealed by the phenomenon of visual crowding: an object seen in the periphery, easily recognized in isolation, can become impossible to identify when surrounded by other, similar objects. The neural basis of crowding is hotly debated: while prevailing theories hold that crowded information is irrecoverable – destroyed due to over-integration in early stage visual processing – recent evidence demonstrates otherwise. Crowding can occur between high-level, configural object representations, and crowded objects can contribute with high precision to judgments about the “gist” of a group of objects, even when they are individually unrecognizable. While existing models can account for the basic diagnostic criteria of crowding (e.g., specific critical spacing, spatial anisotropies, and temporal tuning), no present model explains how crowding can operate simultaneously at multiple levels in the visual processing hierarchy, including at the level of whole objects. Here, we present a new model of visual crowding—the hierarchical sparse selection (HSS) model, which accounts for object-level crowding, as well as a number of puzzling findings in the recent literature. Counter to existing theories, we posit that crowding occurs not due to degraded visual representations in the brain, but due to impoverished sampling of visual representations for the sake of perception. The HSS model unifies findings from a disparate array of visual crowding studies and makes testable predictions about how information in crowded scenes can be accessed.

Highlights

  • Peripheral vision is not what it seems

  • A limit on our ability to select individual objects is revealed by the phenomenon of visual crowding: an object seen in the periphery, recognized in isolation, can become impossible to identify when surrounded by other, similar objects.The neural basis of crowding is hotly debated: while prevailing theories hold that crowded information is irrecoverable – destroyed due to over-integration in early stage visual processing – recent evidence demonstrates otherwise

  • The hierarchical sparse selection (HSS) model accounts for both the broad array of previously known characteristics of crowding and for recent findings that information can survive crowding, influencing ensemble perception (Fischer and Whitney, 2011; Lau and Cheung, 2012), priming behavior (Faivre and Kouider, 2011; Yeh et al, 2012), and biasing preferences (Kouider et al, 2011)

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Summary

The hierarchical sparse selection model of visual crowding

Reviewed by: Hans-Peter Frey, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, USA Bosco Tjan, University of Southern California, USA. A limit on our ability to select individual objects is revealed by the phenomenon of visual crowding: an object seen in the periphery, recognized in isolation, can become impossible to identify when surrounded by other, similar objects.The neural basis of crowding is hotly debated: while prevailing theories hold that crowded information is irrecoverable – destroyed due to over-integration in early stage visual processing – recent evidence demonstrates otherwise. While existing models can account for the basic diagnostic criteria of crowding (e.g., specific critical spacing, spatial anisotropies, and temporal tuning), no present model explains how crowding can operate simultaneously at multiple levels in the visual processing hierarchy, including at the level of whole objects. We present a new model of visual crowding—the hierarchical sparse selection (HSS) model, which accounts for object-level crowding, as well as a number of puzzling findings in the recent literature.

INTRODUCTION
The HSS model of visual crowding
Findings
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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