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Domain-general ability underlies complex object ensemble processing.

Ting-Yun Chang, L. Gauthier

2021Journal of Experimental Psychology General21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When seeing groups of objects, various features can be extracted to form an ensemble representation, including low-level features such as orientation and higher-level features like facial expression. Past research proposed distinct abilities for ensemble coding of high-level versus low-level visual features, but the only complex objects used were faces. Here, we examine evidence for a shared ability supporting ensemble representations for complex objects from different object categories. In 2 experiments, participants completed an ensemble mean judgment task for an array of 4 objects, including planes and birds (Experiment 1) or cars and birds (Experiment 2). We also measured and controlled for domain-specific recognition ability. Across the 2 experiments, performance on ensemble judgments with different objects were correlated, even after controlled for domain-specific recognition abilities. These findings provide the strongest evidence to date of a domain-general ability involved in complex object ensemble coding. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Coding (social sciences)Artificial intelligenceComputer scienceDomain (mathematical analysis)Object (grammar)Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognitionOrientation (vector space)Representation (politics)Pattern recognition (psychology)PsychologyNatural language processingMathematicsStatisticsPolitical scienceGeometryPoliticsMathematical analysisLawTechnology Assessment and ManagementArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationTechnology and Human Factors in Education and Health