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Visual object individuation occurs over object wholes, parts, and even holes

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2016

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Springer (part of Springer Nature)
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Porter, Katharine B., Veronica Mazza, Annie Garofalo, and Alfonso Caramazza. 2016. “Visual Object Individuation Occurs over Object Wholes, Parts, and Even Holes.” Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 78 (4): 1145–62. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-016-1064-0.

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Abstract

Segmentation of the world into meaningful units has typically been described as object individuation, emphasizing the spatially disconnected quality that comes as a result of objecthood. This segmentation can occur rapidly, even in parallel for multiple objects. It remains unclear whether objecthood is a necessary requirement for parallel individuation, or whether target features in distinct locations, such as object parts, may also be individuated in parallel. In a series of six experiments, we used a rapid enumeration task to test whether subitizing, a phenomenon believed to result from parallel individuation, occurs over object parts. We found that subitizing and individuation occur over connected object parts as well as physically separate objects of varied shapes and sizes. We also observed subitizing when target items are indents, features intrinsic to the shape of the object, and when cues for occlusion were removed. The results of these studies suggest that parallel individuation is not bound to objecthood, and can occur over object parts existing in separate locations.

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