Perceptual Organization in Infancy: Bottom-Up and Top-Down Influences

ABSTRACT A program of research on the origins and development of perceptual organization during infancy is reviewed. The data suggest that infant perception of visual pattern information is guided by adherence to a number of bottom-up, stimulus-based organizational principles (including common motion, common region, connectedness, continuity, proximity, and similarity) that become functional over different time courses of development. In addition, not all principles may be readily deployed in the manner proposed by Gestalt psychologists and the emergence of some may be facilitated by perceptual learning. Moreover, there is evidence that the principles can be modulated by top-down influences inclusive of object concept knowledge. This body of research indicates that it is necessary to analyze stimulus-based automatic organizational processes as well as perceptual learning and other top-down processes to understand visual organization and its development in infancy.

[1]  A. Needham,et al.  Infants' formation and use of categories to segregate objects , 2005, Cognition.

[2]  P. Quinn,et al.  Learning Perceptual Organization in Infancy , 2005, Psychological science.

[3]  Paul C Quinn,et al.  Development of Form Similarity as a Gestalt Grouping Principle in Infancy , 2002, Psychological science.

[4]  Paul C Quinn,et al.  Are some gestalt principles deployed more readily than others during early development? The case of lightness versus form similarity. , 2006, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[5]  Tom M. L. Wigley,et al.  Global Warming Trends. , 1990 .

[6]  Robert L. Goldstone,et al.  The interplay between perceptual organization and categorization in the representation of complex visual patterns by young infants. , 2006, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[7]  Philippe G. Schyns,et al.  What goes up may come down: perceptual process and knowledge access in the organization of complex visual patterns by young infants , 2003, Cogn. Sci..

[8]  M. Garrett,et al.  Perceptual knowledge of objects in infancy , 1982 .

[9]  S. Palmer Common region: A new principle of perceptual grouping , 1992, Cognitive Psychology.

[10]  S. Palmer,et al.  Rethinking perceptual organization: The role of uniform connectedness , 1994, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[11]  P. Quinn,et al.  Good continuation affects discrimination of visual pattern information in young infants , 2005, Perception & psychophysics.

[12]  P. Quinn,et al.  Perceptual Organization Based on Common Region in Infancy. , 2007, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[13]  E. Spelke,et al.  Perception of partly occluded objects in infancy , 1983, Cognitive Psychology.

[14]  A. Needham Object recognition and object segregation in 4.5-month-old infants. , 2001, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[15]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Effects of prior experience on 4.5-month-old infants' object segregation , 1998 .

[16]  Paul C. Quinn,et al.  Perceptual organization of complex visual configurations by young infants , 1997 .

[17]  Paul C. Quinn,et al.  Part—whole perception in early infancy: Evidence for perceptual grouping produced by lightness similarity , 1993 .

[18]  P. Quinn,et al.  Young infants readily use proximity to organize visual pattern information. , 2008, Acta psychologica.

[19]  P. Quinn,et al.  Perceptual organization based on illusory regions in infancy , 2008, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[20]  J. Knott The organization of behavior: A neuropsychological theory , 1951 .

[21]  I. Rock,et al.  The legacy of Gestalt psychology. , 1990, Scientific American.

[22]  O. Reiser,et al.  Principles Of Gestalt Psychology , 1936 .

[23]  P. Quinn,et al.  What Goes with What? Development of Perceptual Grouping in Infancy , 2008 .

[24]  P. Quinn,et al.  Infants’ sensitivity to uniform connectedness as a cue for perceptual organization , 2006, Psychonomic bulletin & review.