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The leaf identification problem : natural scene statistics and human performanceIng, Almon David 21 September 2010 (has links)
For animals with advanced nervous systems, survival and reproduction can depend upon accurate perception of the environment. To understand how a perceptual system should solve a perception task, it is important to consider designs for an ideal observer, a theoretical system that solves a perception task in an optimal way given specific constraints. I studied three specific classification tasks related to the problem of identifying and segmenting leaves in foliage-rich images. In order to derive the ideal observers for these tasks, I created a database of hand-segmented leaves which served to define the ground-truth for these tasks. I also created a new method that uses the ground-truth as a basis for performing statistical inference (classification) in a nearly optimal way. This made it possible for me to approximate ideal observers by approximating an optimal classifier for each task. I also conducted psychophysical experiments to measure human performance in these tasks. The results provide information about how the human visual system should and does interpret foliage-rich images. / text
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