Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CS 182 Sections 101 - 102 Leon Barrett. Status A3-P1 already due A3-P2 due on Thursday This week –Color –Representations and concepts Next week.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CS 182 Sections 101 - 102 Leon Barrett. Status A3-P1 already due A3-P2 due on Thursday This week –Color –Representations and concepts Next week."— Presentation transcript:

1 CS 182 Sections 101 - 102 Leon Barrett

2

3

4

5

6 Status A3-P1 already due A3-P2 due on Thursday This week –Color –Representations and concepts Next week –Schemas and frames

7 Questions! 1.How do humans detect color biologically? 2.Are color names arbitrary? What are the findings surrounding this?

8 Questions! How do humans detect color biologically? Are color names arbitrary? What are the findings surrounding this?

9 A Tour of the Visual System two regions of interest: –retina –LGN

10 http://www.iit.edu/~npr/DrJennifer/visual/retina.html Rods and Cones in the Retina

11 The Microscopic View

12 What Rods and Cones Detect Notice how they aren’t distributed evenly, and the rod is more sensitive to shorter wavelengths

13 Center / Surround Strong activation in center, inhibition on surround The effect you get using these center / surround cells is enhanced edges top: the stimuli itself middle: brightness of the stimuli bottom: response of the retina You’ll see this idea get used in Regier’s model http://www-psych.stanford.edu/~lera/psych115s/notes/lecture3/figures1.html

14 Color Opponent Cells These cells are found in the LGN Four color channels: Red, Green, Blue, Yellow R/G, B/Y pairs much like center/surround cells We can use these to determine the visual system’s fundamental hue responses Mean Spikes / Sec Wavelength (mμ) 25400700 +R-G 50 25 400700 +G-R 50 25 400700 +Y-B 25 400700 +B-Y (Monkey brain)

15 Questions! 1.How do humans detect color biologically? 2.Are color names arbitrary? What are the findings surrounding this?

16 The WCS Color Chips Basic color terms: –Single word (not blue-green) –Frequently used (not mauve) –Refers primarily to colors (not lime) –Applies to any object (not blonde) FYI: English has 11 basic color terms

17 Results of Kay’s Color Study If you group languages into the number of basic color terms they have, as the number of color terms increases, additional terms specify focal colors

18 Representations What is a localist representation? What is a distributed representation? How many things can you represent with 4 neurons, in each representation? How many conjunctions of things can each represent? What is coarse coding? What is coarse-fine coding?

19 Coarse Coding info you can encode with one fine resolution unit = info you can with a few coarse resolution units Now as long as we need fewer coarse units total, we’re good

20 Coarse-Fine Coding but we can run into ghost “images” Feature 2 e.g. Direction of Motion Feature 1 e.g. Orientation Y X G G Y-Orientation X-Orientation Y-DirX-Dir Coarse in F2, Fine in F1 Coarse in F1, Fine in F2

21 Categories What constitutes a basic-level category? Is red a basic-level category? Is maroon? Does it vary from person to person? What is a superordinate category? A subordinate category?

22 Categories & Prototypes: Overview Three ways of examining the categories we form: –relations between categories (e.g. basic-level category) –internal category structure (e.g. radial category) –instances of category members (e.g. prototypes) Furniture SofaDesk leather sofa fabric sofa L- shaped desk Recept ion disk Basic-Level Category Superordinate Subordinate

23 Basic-Level Category Perception: –similar overall perceived shape –single mental image –(gestalt perception) –fast identification Function: –general motor program Communication: –shortest –most commonly used –contextually neutral –first to be learned by children –first to enter the lexicon Knowledge Organization: –most attributes of category members stored at this level What constitutes a basic-level category? Definition: Red? Maroon? yes arguable (expertise)

24 Category Structure Classical Category: –necessary and sufficient conditions Radial Category: –a central member branching out to less-central and non-central cases –degrees of membership, with extendable boundary Family Resemblance: –every family member looks like some other family member(s) –there is no one property common across all members (e.g. polysemy) Prototype-Based Category Essentially-Contested Category (Gallie, 1956) (e.g. democracy) Ad-hoc Category (e.g. things you can fit inside a shopping bag)

25 Prototype Cognitive reference point –standards of comparison Social stereotypes –snap judgments –defines cultural expectations –challengeable Typical case prototypes –default expectation –often used unconsciously in reasoning Ideal case / Nightmare case –e.g. ideal vacation –can be abstract –may be neither typical nor stereotypical Paragons / Anti-paragons –an individual member that exhibits the ideal Salient examples –e.g. 9/11 – terrorism act Generators –central member + rules –e.g. natural number = single-digit numbers + arithmetic

26 Mother The birth model The person who gives birth is the mother The genetic model The female who contributes the genetic material is the mother The nurturance model The female adult who nurtures and raises a child is the mother of the child The marital model The wife of the father is the mother The genealogical model The closest female ancestor is the mother (WFDT Ch.4, p.74, p.83)

27 Radial Structure of Mother The radial structure of this category is defined with respect to the different models Central Case Stepmother Adoptive mother Birth mother Natural mother Foster mother Biological mother Surrogate mother Unwed mother Genetic mother


Download ppt "CS 182 Sections 101 - 102 Leon Barrett. Status A3-P1 already due A3-P2 due on Thursday This week –Color –Representations and concepts Next week."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google