PSYC 3702 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Extrastriate Body Area, Principles Of Grouping, Illusory Contours
Document Summary
To understand the concept of perception and recognizing objects a common example that is often used is the. Rubin vase/face illusion which incorporates the concept of bistable illusions, which is defined as the ability to perceive two different objects in one image but not at the same time. I was noted that the more complex figure in the image would most likely be considered the figure because like a computer, our perception prefers to look at more complex images due to the high level of information. Cells in the v1 are much less complex than those located beyond the v1 region so in the v2, v3 . These cells are often associated with responses to visual properties for perceiving objects; object perception. Unlike cells in the striate cortex, it was found that cells in the it had receptive fields that could spread over half of the field of view.