Bricks, Butter, and Slices of Cucumber: Investigating Semantic Influences in Amodal Completion

Objects in our world are partly occluded by other objects or sometimes even partly by themselves. Amodal completion is a visual process that enables us to perceive these objects as complete and is influenced by both local object information, present at contour intersections, and overall (global) object shape. In contrast, object semantics have been demonstrated to play no role in amodal completion but do so only by means of subjective methods. In the present study, object semantics were operationalised by material hardness of familiar objects which was varied to test whether it leaves amodal completion unaffected. Specifically, we investigated the perceived form of joined naturalistic objects that differ in perceived material hardness, employing the primed matching paradigm. In experiments 1 and 2, probing three different prime durations, amodal completion of a notched circular object changes systematically with the hardness of the object it was joined to. These results are in line with the view that amodal completion is inseparable from general object interpretation, during which object semantics may dominate.

[1]  Sven Vrins,et al.  Form Perception of Partly Occluded Shapes in 4‐Month‐Old Infants , 2008 .

[2]  E. Leeuwenberg,et al.  Multiple Completions Primed by Occlusion Patterns , 1995, Perception.

[3]  Rufin VanRullen,et al.  The power of the feed-forward sweep , 2008, Advances in cognitive psychology.

[4]  Rob van Lier,et al.  Global Visual Completion of Quasi-Regular Shapes , 2002 .

[5]  A. Sekuler Local and Global Minima in Visual Completion: Effects of Symmetry and Orientation , 1994, Perception.

[6]  Robert Oostenveld,et al.  Cortical responses to contextual influences in amodal completion , 2006, NeuroImage.

[7]  G. Kanizsa Seeing and thinking. , 1985, Acta psychologica.

[8]  P. Kellman,et al.  A theory of visual interpolation in object perception , 1991, Cognitive Psychology.

[9]  I. Rock The Logic of Perception , 1983 .

[10]  R van Lier,et al.  Integrating Global and Local Aspects of Visual Occlusion , 1994, Perception.

[11]  Bruno A Olshausen,et al.  Timecourse of neural signatures of object recognition. , 2003, Journal of vision.

[12]  J. Wagemans,et al.  From images to objects: Global and local completions of self-occluded parts , 1999 .

[13]  Rob van Lier,et al.  Investigating metrical and structural aspects of visual completion: Priming versus searching , 2005 .

[14]  P U Tse,et al.  Illusory Volumes from Conformation , 1998, Perception.

[15]  N. Kanwisher,et al.  PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE Research Article Visual Recognition As Soon as You Know It Is There, You Know What It Is , 2022 .

[16]  N Bruno,et al.  Amodal completion of partly occluded surfaces: is there a mosaic stage? , 1997, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[17]  N Rubin,et al.  The Role of Junctions in Surface Completion and Contour Matching , 2001, Perception.

[18]  Rob van Lier,et al.  Investigating global effects in visual occlusion: from a partly occluded square to the back of a tree-trunk. , 1999 .

[19]  M. Potter Short-term conceptual memory for pictures. , 1976, Journal of experimental psychology. Human learning and memory.

[20]  H. K. Beller Priming: effects of advance information on matching. , 1971, Journal of experimental psychology.

[21]  David Marr,et al.  VISION A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information , 2009 .

[22]  S. Hochstein,et al.  View from the Top Hierarchies and Reverse Hierarchies in the Visual System , 2002, Neuron.

[23]  Mary A. Peterson,et al.  Amodal Completion in Visual Search , 2004, Psychological science.

[24]  Stephen E. Palmer,et al.  Perception of partly occluded objects: A microgenetic analysis. , 1992 .

[25]  F Boselie,et al.  The minimum principle and visual pattern completion , 1989, Psychological research.

[26]  Marco Bertamini,et al.  Amodal Completion of Partly Occluded Surfaces: Is There a Mosaic Stage? , 1997 .

[27]  P. Tse A contour propagation approach to surface filling-in and volume formation. , 2001, Psychological review.

[28]  R. van Lier Investigating global effects in visual occlusion: from a partly occluded square to the back of a tree-trunk. , 1999, Acta psychologica.

[29]  E. Leeuwenberg,et al.  Competing global and local completions in visual occlusion. , 1995 .

[30]  Moshe Bar,et al.  The rise and fall of priming: how visual exposure shapes cortical representations of objects. , 2005, Cerebral cortex.

[31]  Tessa C J de Wit,et al.  Global Visual Completion of Quasi-Regular Shapes , 2002, Perception.