Grounding the figure.

Coding rules can be formulated in which the shortest description of a figure-ground pattern exhibits a hierarchical structure, with the ground playing a primary and the figure a secondary role. We hypothesized that the process of perception involves and assimilation phase followed by a test phase in which the ground is tested before the figure. Experiments are described in which pairs of consecutive, superimposed patterns are presented in rapid succession, resulting in a subjective impression of seeing one pattern only. In these presentations, the second pattern introduces some deliberate distortion of the figure or ground displayed in the first pattern. Maximal distortions of the ground occur at shorter stimulus onset asynchronies than maximal distortions of the figure, suggesting that the ground codes are processed before figure codes. Moreover, patterns presenting the ground first are more likely to be perceived as ground, regardless of the distortions, than patterns presenting the figure first. This quasi masking or microgenetic approach might be relevant to theories on :mediations of immediate, or direct" perception.

[1]  B. Breitmeyer Unmasking visual masking: a look at the "why" behind the veil of the "how". , 1980, Psychological review.

[2]  Lester A. Lefton,et al.  Metacontrast: A review. , 1973 .

[3]  M T Turvey,et al.  Central sources of visual masking: Indexing structures supporting seeing at a single, brief glance , 1979, Psychological research.

[4]  D. Navon Forest before trees: The precedence of global features in visual perception , 1977, Cognitive Psychology.

[5]  M. S. Mayzner,et al.  Cognition And Reality , 1976 .

[6]  J. Hochberg,et al.  A quantitative approach to figural "goodness". , 1953, Journal of experimental psychology.

[7]  J. Fodor,et al.  How direct is visual perception?: Some reflections on Gibson's “ecological approach” , 1981, Cognition.

[8]  Ronald Olson,et al.  Reversibility of the Necker Cube: VIII. Parts of the Figure Contributing to the Perception of Reversals , 1966 .

[9]  H. Werner Studies on Contour: I. Qualitative Analyses , 1935 .

[10]  J. Gibson The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception , 1979 .

[11]  A. Chapanis,et al.  Interposition as a Cue for the Perception of Relative Distance , 1953 .

[12]  P. A. Kolers Intensity and contour effects in visual masking , 1962 .

[13]  B G Breitmeyer,et al.  Implications of sustained and transient channels for theories of visual pattern masking, saccadic suppression, and information processing. , 1976, Psychological review.

[14]  E. Leeuwenberg,et al.  Coding theory of visual pattern completion. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[15]  S. Ullman Against direct perception , 1980, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.