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Identifying shape transformations from photographs of real objects

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  • Filipp Schmidt
  • Roland W Fleming

Abstract

An important task of human visual cognition is to make inferences about properties of objects. One such property is an object's causal history: what happened to the object in its past (e.g., “this paper has been folded”). There is relatively little research on whether and how we make such inferences. We took photographs of objects from six different materials (‘wax’, ‘aluminum foil’, ‘gold foil’, ‘chicken wire’, ‘putty’, ‘cardboard’) transformed by one of four shape-altering transformations (‘folded’, ‘bent’, ‘crumpled’, ‘twisted’). By varying execution of transformation and viewpoint, we obtained 30 images of each material/transformation combination (720 images). We asked different groups of participants to: (1) name transformations and materials, (2) rate images with respect to the extent they belonged to each transformation or material class, and (3) classify images into the four transformation classes. Our results show that participants can infer transformations from object shape–with accuracy being modulated by object material. This inference of causal history from observed object shape shows that we can distinguish between intrinsic (material) and extrinsic (transformation) properties of the object. The separation of observed shape features by their causal origin (‘shape scission’) presumably involves both perceptual and cognitive abilities.

Suggested Citation

  • Filipp Schmidt & Roland W Fleming, 2018. "Identifying shape transformations from photographs of real objects," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(8), pages 1-20, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0202115
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202115
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Barton L. Anderson & Jonathan Winawer, 2005. "Image segmentation and lightness perception," Nature, Nature, vol. 434(7029), pages 79-83, March.
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