Scene context automatically drives predictions of object transformations

Publication date

2023-09

Authors

Aldegheri, Giacomo
Gayet, SuryaORCID 0000-0001-9728-1272ISNI 000000037261256X
Peelen, Marius V.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

As our viewpoint changes, the whole scene around us rotates coherently. This allows us to predict how one part of a scene (e.g., an object) will change by observing other parts (e.g., the scene background). While human object perception is known to be strongly context-dependent, previous research has largely focused on how scene context can disambiguate fixed object properties, such as identity (e.g., a car is easier to recognize on a road than on a beach). It remains an open question whether object representations are updated dynamically based on the surrounding scene context, for example across changes in viewpoint. Here, we tested whether human observers dynamically and automatically predict the appearance of objects based on the orientation of the background scene. In three behavioral experiments (N = 152), we temporarily occluded objects within scenes that rotated. Upon the objects' reappearance, participants had to perform a perceptual discrimination task, which did not require taking the scene rotation into account. Performance on this orthogonal task strongly depended on whether objects reappeared rotated coherently with the surrounding scene or not. This effect persisted even when a majority of trials violated this real-world contingency between scene and object, showcasing the automaticity of these scene-based predictions. These findings indicate that contextual information plays an important role in predicting object transformations in structured real-world environments.

Keywords

Mental rotation, Object perception, Scene perception, Visual expectations, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Language and Linguistics, Developmental and Educational Psychology, Linguistics and Language, Cognitive Neuroscience

Citation

Aldegheri, G, Gayet, S & Peelen, M V 2023, 'Scene context automatically drives predictions of object transformations', Cognition, vol. 238, 105521. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105521