From the Cover: Orientation saliency without visual cortex and target selection in archer fish |
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Authors: | Alik Mokeichev Ronen Segev Ohad Ben-Shahar |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Computer Science.;bZlotowski Center for Neuroscience, and;cDepartment of Life Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva 84105, Israel |
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Abstract: | Our visual attention is attracted by salient stimuli in our environment and affected by primitive features such as orientation, color, and motion. Perceptual saliency due to orientation contrast has been extensively demonstrated in behavioral experiments with humans and other primates and is believed to be facilitated by the functional organization of the primary visual cortex. In behavioral experiments with the archer fish, a proficient hunter with remarkable visual abilities, we found an orientation saliency effect similar to that observed in human subjects. Given the enormous evolutionary distance between humans and archer fish, our findings suggest that orientation-based saliency constitutes a fundamental building block for efficient visual information processing. |
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Keywords: | orientation contrast visual information processing visual saliency orientation-based texture segregation visual search |
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