Edelman, Shimon and Intrator, Nathan and Poggio, Tomaso (1997) Complex cells and Object Recognition. [Preprint] (Unpublished)
Full text available as:
Postscript
699Kb |
Abstract
Nearest-neighbor correlation-based similarity computation in the space of outputs of complex-type receptive fields can support robust recognition of 3D objects. Our experiments with four collections of objects resulted in mean recognition rates between 84% (for subordinate-level discrimination among 15 quadruped animal shapes) and 94% (for basic-level recognition of 20 everyday objects), over a 40deg X 40deg range of viewpoints, centered on a stored canonical view and related to it by rotations in depth (comparable figures were obtained for image-plane translations). This result has interesting implications for the design of a front end to an artificial object recognition system, and for the understanding of the faculty of object recognition in primate vision.
Item Type: | Preprint |
---|---|
Subjects: | Psychology > Cognitive Psychology |
ID Code: | 561 |
Deposited By: | Edelman, Shimon |
Deposited On: | 17 Oct 1997 |
Last Modified: | 11 Mar 2011 08:54 |
Metadata
- ASCII Citation
- Atom
- BibTeX
- Dublin Core
- EP3 XML
- EPrints Application Profile (experimental)
- EndNote
- HTML Citation
- ID Plus Text Citation
- JSON
- METS
- MODS
- MPEG-21 DIDL
- OpenURL ContextObject
- OpenURL ContextObject in Span
- RDF+N-Triples
- RDF+N3
- RDF+XML
- Refer
- Reference Manager
- Search Data Dump
- Simple Metadata
- YAML
Repository Staff Only: item control page