Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"vision" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Attention-Fusion-Based Two-Stream Vision Transformer for Heart Sound Classification Ranipa K; Zhu WP; Swamy MNS; 41155032
ENCS
2 Lung Nodule Malignancy Classification Integrating Deep and Radiomic Features in a Three-Way Attention-Based Fusion Module Khademi S; Heidarian S; Afshar P; Mohammadi A; Sidiqi A; Nguyen ET; Ganeshan B; Oikonomou A; 41150036
ENCS
3 MedCLIP-SAMv2: Towards universal text-driven medical image segmentation Koleilat T; Asgariandehkordi H; Rivaz H; Xiao Y; 40779830
ENCS
4 Inferring concussion history in athletes using pose and ground reaction force estimation and stability analysis of plyometric exercise videos Alves W; Babouras A; Martineau PA; Schutt D; Robbins S; Fevens T; 40632382
ENCS
5 Real-time motion detection using dynamic mode decomposition Mignacca M; Brugiapaglia S; Bramburger JJ; 40421310
MATHSTATS
6 Deep neural network-based robotic visual servoing for satellite target tracking Ghiasvand S; Xie WF; Mohebbi A; 39440297
ENCS
7 Masters students' satisfaction with academic supervision and experiences of mental and emotional distress and wellbeing Nadine S Bekkouche 38848331
EDUCATION
8 Comparing novel smartphone pose estimation frameworks with the Kinect V2 for knee tracking during athletic stress tests Babouras A; Abdelnour P; Fevens T; Martineau PA; 38730186
ENCS
9 Breamy: An augmented reality mHealth prototype for surgical decision-making in breast cancer Najafi N; Addie M; Meterissian S; Kersten-Oertel M; 38638506
ENCS
10 CosSIF: Cosine similarity-based image filtering to overcome low inter-class variation in synthetic medical image datasets Islam M; Zunair H; Mohammed N; 38492455
ENCS
11 Intersection of Intimate Partner Violence, Partner Interference, and Family Supportive Supervision on Victims' Work Withdrawal Isola C; Granger S; Turner N; LeBlanc MM; Barling J; 37359457
JMSB
12 Single Digit Index Finger Amputation-To Replant or Not? Thibedeau M; Ramji M; McKenzie M; Yeung J; Nickerson DA; 36755823
BIOLOGY
13 Who's cooking tonight? A time-use study of coupled adults in Toronto, Canada Liu B; Widener MJ; Smith LG; Farber S; Gesink D; Minaker LM; Patterson Z; Larsen K; Gilliland J; 36339032
ENCS
14 A Newly Identified Impairment in Both Vision and Hearing Increases the Risk of Deterioration in Both Communication and Cognitive Performance Guthrie DM; Williams N; Campos J; Mick P; Orange JB; Pichora-Fuller MK; Savundranayagam MY; Wittich W; Phillips NA; 35859361
PSYCHOLOGY
15 Assessing optimal colour and illumination to facilitate reading: an analysis of print size Morrice E; Murphy C; Soldano V; Addona C; Wittich W; Johnson AP; 34549808
PSYCHOLOGY
16 Assessing optimal colour and illumination to facilitate reading. Morrice E, Murphy C, Soldano V, Addona C, Wittich W, Johnson AP 33533095
PSYCHOLOGY
17 The Relationship Between Cognitive Status and Known Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in Age-Related Macular Degeneration. Murphy C; Johnson AP; Koenekoop RK; Seiple W; Overbury O; 33178008
PSYCHOLOGY
18 CCCDTD5 recommendations on early non cognitive markers of dementia: A Canadian consensus Montero-Odasso M; Pieruccini-Faria F; Ismail Z; Li K; Lim A; Phillips N; Kamkar N; Sarquis-Adamson Y; Speechley M; Theou O; Verghese J; Wallace L; Camicioli R; 33094146
CRDH
19 The Prevalence of Hearing, Vision, and Dual Sensory Loss in Older Canadians: An Analysis of Data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging. Mick PT, Hämäläinen A, Kolisang L, Pichora-Fuller MK, Phillips N, Guthrie D, Wittich W 32546290
PSYCHOLOGY
20 Hearing and Cognitive Impairments Increase the Risk of Long-term Care Admissions Williams N; Phillips NA; Wittich W; Campos JL; Mick P; Orange JB; Pichora-Fuller MK; Savundranayagam MY; Guthrie DM; 31911955
PSYCHOLOGY
21 Understanding Events by Eye and Ear: Agent and Verb Drive Non-anticipatory Eye Movements in Dynamic Scenes. de Almeida RG, Di Nardo J, Antal C, von Grünau MW 31649574
PSYCHOLOGY
22 Integration of Growth and Cell Size via the TOR Pathway and the Dot6 Transcription Factor in Candida albicans. Chaillot J, Tebbji F, Mallick J, Sellam A 30593490
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Understanding Events by Eye and Ear: Agent and Verb Drive Non-anticipatory Eye Movements in Dynamic Scenes.
Authors:de Almeida RGDi Nardo JAntal Cvon Grünau MW
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31649574?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02162
Publication:Frontiers in psychology
Keywords:event comprehensioneye movementslanguage-vision interactionmodularitysentence comprehensionsituated language processingverb meaningvisual world paradigm
PMID:31649574 Category:Front Psychol Date Added:2019-10-28
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Department of Linguistics, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States.

Description:

Understanding Events by Eye and Ear: Agent and Verb Drive Non-anticipatory Eye Movements in Dynamic Scenes.

Front Psychol. 2019;10:2162

Authors: de Almeida RG, Di Nardo J, Antal C, von Grünau MW

Abstract

As Macnamara (1978) once asked, how can we talk about what we see? We report on a study manipulating realistic dynamic scenes and sentences aiming to understand the interaction between linguistic and visual representations in real-world situations. Specifically, we monitored participants' eye movements as they watched video clips of everyday scenes while listening to sentences describing these scenes. We manipulated two main variables. The first was the semantic class of the verb in the sentence and the second was the action/motion of the agent in the unfolding event. The sentences employed two verb classes-causatives (e.g., break) and perception/psychological (e.g., notice)-which impose different constraints on the nouns that serve as their grammatical complements. The scenes depicted events in which agents either moved toward a target object (always the referent of the verb-complement noun), away from it, or remained neutral performing a given activity (such as cooking). Scenes and sentences were synchronized such that the verb onset corresponded to the first video frame of the agent motion toward or away from the object. Results show effects of agent motion but weak verb-semantic restrictions: causatives draw more attention to potential referents of their grammatical complements than perception verbs only when the agent moves toward the target object. Crucially, we found no anticipatory verb-driven eye movements toward the target object, contrary to studies using non-naturalistic and static scenes. We propose a model in which linguistic and visual computations in real-world situations occur largely independent of each other during the early moments of perceptual input, but rapidly interact at a central, conceptual system using a common, propositional code. Implications for language use in real world contexts are discussed.

PMID: 31649574 [PubMed]





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