scholarly journals Perception of a thick transparent object is affected by object and background motions but not dependent on the motion speed

2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 823 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shohei Ueda ◽  
Yusuke Tani ◽  
Takehiro Nagai ◽  
Kowa Koida ◽  
Shigeki Nakauchi ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 723-730
Author(s):  
Juraj Gerlici ◽  
Yuliia Fomina ◽  
Kateryna Kravchenko

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Di Giorgio ◽  
Marco Lunghi ◽  
Giorgio Vallortigara ◽  
Francesca Simion

AbstractThe human visual system can discriminate between animate beings vs. inanimate objects on the basis of some kinematic cues, such as starting from rest and speed changes by self-propulsion. The ontogenetic origin of such capability is still under debate. Here we investigate for the first time whether newborns manifest an attentional bias toward objects that abruptly change their speed along a trajectory as contrasted with objects that move at a constant speed. To this end, we systematically manipulated the motion speed of two objects. An object that moves with a constant speed was contrasted with an object that suddenly increases (Experiment 1) or with one that suddenly decreases its speed (Experiment 2). When presented with a single speed change, newborns did not show any visual preference. However, newborns preferred an object that abruptly increases and then decreases its speed (Experiment 3), but they did not show any visual preference for the reverse sequence pattern (Experiment 4). Overall, results are discussed in line with the hypothesis of the existence of attentional biases in newborns that trigger their attention towards some visual cues of motion that characterized animate perception in adults.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 455
Author(s):  
Md Nazrul Islam ◽  
Murat Tahtali ◽  
Mark Pickering

Multispectral polarimetric light field imagery (MSPLFI) contains significant information about a transparent object’s distribution over spectra, the inherent properties of its surface and its directional movement, as well as intensity, which all together can distinguish its specular reflection. Due to multispectral polarimetric signatures being limited to an object’s properties, specular pixel detection of a transparent object is a difficult task because the object lacks its own texture. In this work, we propose a two-fold approach for determining the specular reflection detection (SRD) and the specular reflection inpainting (SRI) in a transparent object. Firstly, we capture and decode 18 different transparent objects with specularity signatures obtained using a light field (LF) camera. In addition to our image acquisition system, we place different multispectral filters from visible bands and polarimetric filters at different orientations to capture images from multisensory cues containing MSPLFI features. Then, we propose a change detection algorithm for detecting specular reflected pixels from different spectra. A Mahalanobis distance is calculated based on the mean and the covariance of both polarized and unpolarized images of an object in this connection. Secondly, an inpainting algorithm that captures pixel movements among sub-aperture images of the LF is proposed. In this regard, a distance matrix for all the four connected neighboring pixels is computed from the common pixel intensities of each color channel of both the polarized and the unpolarized images. The most correlated pixel pattern is selected for the task of inpainting for each sub-aperture image. This process is repeated for all the sub-aperture images to calculate the final SRI task. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed two-fold approach significantly improves the accuracy of detection and the quality of inpainting. Furthermore, the proposed approach also improves the SRD metrics (with mean F1-score, G-mean, and accuracy as 0.643, 0.656, and 0.981, respectively) and SRI metrics (with mean structural similarity index (SSIM), peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), mean squared error (IMMSE), and mean absolute deviation (MAD) as 0.966, 0.735, 0.073, and 0.226, respectively) for all the sub-apertures of the 18 transparent objects in MSPLFI dataset as compared with those obtained from the methods in the literature considered in this paper. Future work will exploit the integration of machine learning for better SRD accuracy and SRI quality.


2012 ◽  
Vol 424-425 ◽  
pp. 598-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
You Min Wang ◽  
Chun Zhao ◽  
Jian Hua Zhang

In order to improve design performance, shorten development cycles, reduce production cost, we design and research the forklift hydraulic system, developed forklift hydraulic system diagram. Forklift virtual prototype’s 3-D solid modeling is designed by Pro / E three-dimensional software, and imported into the ADAMS environment. Add constraints and drivers exert the control function separately to the tilting cylinder and lifting cylinder, carry on the kinematics simulation. Through the analysis to the compound motion actuation control functional arrangement、the compound motion speed graph、the gate’s tilt angle graph、the tilting cylinder stress graph and the lifting cylinder stress graph, he simulation result indicated: each cylinder design is reasonable, the movement without interference,the reasonable work scope satisfied to the work size request


2009 ◽  
Vol 60-61 ◽  
pp. 439-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gao Feng Zheng ◽  
Ling Yun Wang ◽  
Hong Lian Wang ◽  
Dao Heng Sun ◽  
Wen Wang Li ◽  
...  

Direct-Write (DW) technology based on Near-Field Electrospinning (NFES) was introduced to fabricate suspended micro/nano-structure on pattern substrate, and the deposition behaviors of DWed structure under different collector motion speed (CMS) were discussed to improve control of DW technology based on NFES. Deposit point of DWed structure on the substrate can be controlled accurately under the observation of microscope, and position error of micro/nano-structure is less than 5µm. When CMS is compatible with the electrospinning speed, straight line micro/nano-structure can be direct-written across micro-trenches with width of 5~40µm or to bridge two micro-pillars with diameter of 10µm. Due to the water evaporation and surface tension force, DWed structures suspended in the air would shrink smaller compared with that deposited on the top surface of pattern. The shrink ratio of micro-structure is higher than nano-structure and the shrink ratio decreases with the solution concentration increases. When the CMS is lower than electrospinning speed, the electrostatic force and elastic force would play a more prominent role on the deposition behavior of DWed structure. The electrical field strength on the top surface of pattern is higher than the space between two patterns, DWed thin film would deposit along the trip pattern and nanofiber would prefer to aggregate on the top surface of pattern under electrostatic force. When solution concentration is lower than 18%, nanofiber aggregate on the pattern would coagulate to form polymer bundle.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuehui Wu ◽  
Xiaobo Lu ◽  
Henry Leung

This work considers using camera sensors to detect fire smoke. Static features including texture, wavelet, color, edge orientation histogram, irregularity, and dynamic features including motion direction, change of motion direction and motion speed, are extracted from fire smoke to train and test with different combinations. A robust AdaBoost (RAB) classifier is proposed to improve training and classification accuracy. Extensive experiments on well known challenging datasets and application for fire smoke detection demonstrate that the proposed fire smoke detector leads to a satisfactory performance.


1856 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 60-66

The explanation given by Dr. Goring and others of the advantage of increased angular aperture in microscopic objective-glasses appears to the author to be correct, as applied to the case of opake objects, and accordingly his remarks in the present communication have reference to transparent objects only. It is known that delicate markings on a transparent object, such as the valve of a Gyrosigma , may be rendered more distinctly visible by using an object-glass of large aperture, by bringing the mirror to one side, and by placing a central stop in the object-glass or the condenser or in both; the increased distinctness produced in these several ways being due to the illumination of the object by oblique light. Experiment also shows that the degree of obliquity of the light requisite varies with the delicacy or fineness of the markings, being greater as these are more delicate; so that the finest markings require the most oblique light which can possibly be obtained to render them evident, and the angular aperture of the object-glass must necessarily be proportionately large, otherwise none of these oblique rays could enter it.


2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (9) ◽  
pp. 1860-1872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen RH Langton ◽  
Alex H McIntyre ◽  
Peter JB Hancock ◽  
Helmut Leder

Research has established that a perceived eye gaze produces a concomitant shift in a viewer’s spatial attention in the direction of that gaze. The two experiments reported here investigate the extent to which the nature of the eye movement made by the gazer contributes to this orienting effect. On each trial in these experiments, participants were asked to make a speeded response to a target that could appear in a location toward which a centrally presented face had just gazed (a cued target) or in a location that was not the recipient of a gaze (an uncued target). The gaze cues consisted of either fast saccadic eye movements or slower smooth pursuit movements. Cued targets were responded to faster than uncued targets, and this gaze-cued orienting effect was found to be equivalent for each type of gaze shift both when the gazes were un-predictive of target location (Experiment 1) and counterpredictive of target location (Experiment 2). The results offer no support for the hypothesis that motion speed modulates gaze-cued orienting. However, they do suggest that motion of the eyes per se, regardless of the type of movement, may be sufficient to trigger an orienting effect.


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