Preattentive Perception
of
Elementary Three-Dimensional Shapes

J. Y. Sun & P. Perona

Vision Research, 379: pp 2515-2529 (1996 Aug)

Experiments in which a single target pattern is discriminated from multiple background distracters show that certain shaded, two-dimensional (2-D) stimuli consistent with a top-lit, polyhedral interpretation can be processed fast (<80 msec) and in parallel. Unshaded line drawings of the same shapes, however, are processed serially. Strong pop-out asymmetries and control experiments involving shaded patterns that do not have familiar 3-D interpretations suggest that such fast, parallel processing is dependent upon perception of 3-D shape. Furthermore, this process can be influenced by contextual scene information, in a manner that is dependent upon whether the additional cues contribute to the perception of a consistent 3-D scene.