Paper
11 January 2006 A model of color vision with a robot system
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6033, ICO20: Illumination, Radiation, and Color Technologies; 60330O (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.668080
Event: ICO20:Optical Devices and Instruments, 2005, Changchun, China
Abstract
In this paper, we propose to generalize the saccade target method and state that perceptual stability in general arises by learning the effects one's actions have on sensor responses. The apparent visual stability of color percept across saccadic eye movements can be explained by positing that perception involves observing how sensory input changes in response to motor activities. The changes related to self-motion can be learned, and once learned, used to form stable percepts. The variation of sensor data in response to a motor act is therefore a requirement for stable perception rather than something that has to be compensated for in order to perceive a stable world. In this paper, we have provided a simple implementation of this sensory-motor contingency view of perceptual stability. We showed how a straightforward application of the temporal difference enhancement learning technique yielding color percepts that are stable across saccadic eye movements, even though the raw sensor input may change radically.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Haihui Wang "A model of color vision with a robot system", Proc. SPIE 6033, ICO20: Illumination, Radiation, and Color Technologies, 60330O (11 January 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.668080
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Eye

Color vision

RGB color model

Robot vision

Robotic systems

Eye models

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