It has been suggested that numerosity is an elementary quality of perception, similar to colour. If so (and despite considerable investigation), its mechanism remains unknown. Here, we show that observers require on average a massive difference of approximately 40% to detect a change in the number of objects that vary irrelevantly in blur, contrast and spatial separation, and that some naive observers require even more than this. We suggest that relative numerosity is a type of texture discrimination and that a simple model computing the contrast energy at fine spatial scales in the image can perform at least as well as human observers. Like some human observers, this mechanism finds it harder to discriminate relative numerosity in two patterns with different degrees of blur, but it still outpaces the human. We propose energy discrimination as a benchmark model against which more complex models and new data can be tested.
A texture-processing model of the ‘visual sense of number’
M. Morgan,S. Raphael,M. Tibber,S. Dakin
Published 2014 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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- Publication year
2014
- Venue
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
- Publication date
2014-09-07
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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