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      Effects of Line Separation and Exploration on the Visual and Haptic Detection of Symmetry and Repetition

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          Abstract

          Abstract. Detection of regularities (e.g., symmetry, repetition) can be used to investigate object and shape perception. Symmetry and nearby lines may both signal that one object is present, so moving lines apart may disrupt symmetry detection, while repetition may signal that multiple objects are present. Participants discriminated symmetrical/irregular and repeated/irregular pairs of lines. For vision, as predicted, increased line separation disrupted symmetry detection more than repetition detection. For haptics, symmetry and repetition detection were similarly disrupted by increased line separation; also, symmetry was easier to detect than repetition for one-handed exploration and for body midline-aligned stimuli, whereas symmetry was harder to detect than repetition with two-handed exploration of stimuli oriented across the body. These effects of exploration and stimulus orientation show the influence of modality-specific processing rather than properties of the external world on regularity detection. These processes may, in turn, provide insights into the nature of objectness in vision and in touch.

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          Most cited references31

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          Characteristics and models of human symmetry detection.

          Symmetry is everywhere - in natural objects, from crystals to living organisms, in manufactured articles of many kinds, and in art works from all cultures. Symmetry is a salient visual property that is detected efficiently and rapidly by the human visual system. In this paper, several decades of experimental research on human symmetry detection are reviewed. By examining the effects of several factors on symmetry detection, this research has revealed some important characteristics of how humans perceive symmetry. These characteristics constrain the general principles of putative underlying mechanisms and models of human symmetry detection. For example, the orientation of the axis of symmetry and its location in the visual field have effects that suggest that the bilateral symmetry of the visual system at cortical levels of the brain might partly determine the salience of vertical mirror symmetry. At the same time, there is a surprisingly high degree of flexibility and robustness that remains to be explained. Thus, symmetry provides a major challenge to model human flexibility and efficiency within the constraints of the biology of the visual system.
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            Detection of visual symmetries.

            J Wagemans (1994)
            This paper reviews empirical evidence for the detection of visual symmetries and explanatory theories and models of symmetry detection. First, mirror symmetry is compared to other types of symmetry. The idea that symmetry detection is preattentive is then discussed and other roles that attention might play in symmetry detection are considered. The major part of the article consists of a critical examination of the extensive literature about the effects on symmetry detection of several major factors such as the orientation of the symmetry axis, the location of the stimulus in the visual field, grouping, and perturbations. Constraints on plausible models of symmetry detection are derived from this rich database and several proposals are evaluated against it. As a result of bringing this research together, open questions and remaining gaps to be filled by future research are identified.
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              Detection of symmetry and perceptual organization: the way a lock-and-key process works.

              We studied the speed with which observers could detect symmetry in drawings that incorporated symmetric contours--related by reflection or translation--within single objects or across different objects. We asked observers to perform a speeded decision whether pairs of contours are the same, i.e., related by reflection or by translation, or different. When the contours belong to a single object, observers are faster to see the relation between contours when they are related by reflection than by translation. When the contours belong to different objects, observers are faster to see the relation between the contours when they are related by translation than by reflection. We tested whether this advantage of translation is due to a lock-and-key process. We first tested our hypothesis by manipulating the correspondence of the features, so as to make matching more difficult. This change did not produce the predicted pattern of results. We performed a second manipulation to change the appearance of the objects: we increased the prägnanz of the objects by changing the type of lines used to connect the contours. Results indicate that perceptual organization can alter detectability of symmetry.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Exp Psychol
                Exp Psychol
                zea
                Experimental Psychology
                Hogrefe Publishing
                1618-3169
                October 18, 2016
                2016
                : 63
                : 4
                : 197-214
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]School of Psychology, University of Liverpool, UK
                Author notes
                Rebecca Lawson, School of Psychology, University of Liverpool, Eleanor Rathbone Building, Bedford Street South, Liverpool L69 7ZA, UK, rlawson@ 123456liv.ac.uk
                Article
                10.1027/1618-3169/a000329
                5082038
                27750520
                146723cc-82bf-49bf-aac5-5f0982aeb9ca
                © 2016 Hogrefe Publishing.

                Distributed as a Hogrefe OpenMind article under the license [CC BY 4.0 ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)]

                History
                : November 8, 2015
                : October 3, 2016
                : April 18, 2016
                Categories
                Research Article

                regularity,bilateral symmetry,reflection,translation,object
                regularity, bilateral symmetry, reflection, translation, object

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