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Dive into the research topics where E. Charles Leek is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Charles Leek.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2003

The modulation of inhibition of return by objectinternal structure: Implications for theories of object-based attentional selection

Irene Reppa; E. Charles Leek

Recently, Vecera, Behrmann, and McGoldrick (2000), using a divided-attention task, reported that targets are detected more accurately when they occur on the same structural part of an object, suggesting that attention can be directed toward object-internal features. We present converging evidence using the object-based inhibition of return (IOR) paradigm as an implicit measure of selection. The results show that IOR is attenuated when cues and targets appear on the same part of an object relative to when they are separated by a part boundary. These findings suggest that object-based mechanisms of selection can operate over shape representations that make explicit information about objectinternal structure.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2009

Functional specialization in the supplementary motor complex

E. Charles Leek; Stephen Johnston

, Nachev, Kennard and Husain consider data from a broad range of studies involving structures within the supplementary motor complex (SMC) comprising the supplementary motor area (SMA), the supplementary eye fields (SEF) and the pre-supplementary motor area (preSMA). These include studies contrasting self-initiated with externally triggered move ments, studies concerning the observation of graspable objects and studies concerning the planning of motor sequences, motor learning and cognitive control (for example, task switching). Nachev et al. suggest that functional characterizations of the SMC may be better cast in terms of a rostrocaudal continuum of graded change in structure and function than in terms of subregions of discrete or modular functional specializa tion. They discuss one hypothesis, drawn from the data presented, that this continuum


Visual Cognition | 2006

A polarity effect in misoriented object recognition: The role of polar features in the computation of orientation-invariant shape representations

E. Charles Leek; Stephen Johnston

This study investigated the contribution of polar features and internal shape axes to misoriented object recognition. A recognition memory paradigm was used to examine the effects of stimulus orientation on the recognition of previously memorized 2-D novel objects. In contrast to some recent reports, Experiment 1 showed that orientation-invariant performance can be found from the outset of testing with objects containing a salient axis of symmetry. In Experiments 2 and 3 it was found that the removal of a single salient polar feature, while preserving the axis of elongation, was sufficient to increase stimulus orientation time costs. This polarity effect suggests that polar features, and shape axes, play a role in the computation of orientation-invariant shape representations. It is proposed that shape axes facilitate the localization of polar features, which, in turn, are used to resolve the polarity of shape representations during recognition.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 2005

The Structure of Three-Dimensional Object Representations in Human Vision: Evidence from Whole-Part Matching.

E. Charles Leek; Irene Reppa; Martin Arguin

This article examines how the human visual system represents the shapes of 3-dimensional (3D) objects. One long-standing hypothesis is that object shapes are represented in terms of volumetric component parts and their spatial configuration. This hypothesis is examined in 3 experiments using a whole-part matching paradigm in which participants match object parts to whole novel 3D object shapes. Experiments 1 and 2, consistent with volumetric image segmentation, show that whole-part matching is faster for volumetric component parts than for either open or closed nonvolumetric regions of edge contour. However, the results of Experiment 3 show that an equivalent advantage is found for bounded regions of edge contour that correspond to object surfaces. The results are interpreted in terms of a surface-based model of 3D shape representation, which proposes edge-bounded 2-dimensional polygons as basic primitives of surface shape.


Perception | 1998

The Analysis of Orientation-Dependent Time Costs in Visual Recognition

E. Charles Leek

How does the visual system recognise stimuli presented at different orientations? According to the multiple-views hypothesis, misoriented objects are matched to one of several orientation-specific representations of the same objects stored in long-term memory. Much of the evidence for this hypothesis comes from the observation of group mean orientation effects in recognition memory tasks showing that the time taken to identify objects increases as a function of the angular distance between the orientation of the stimulus and its nearest familiar orientation. The aim in this paper is to examine the validity of this interpretation of group mean orientation effects. In particular, it is argued that analyses based on group performance averages that appear consistent with the multiple-views hypothesis may, under certain circumstances, obscure a different theoretically relevant underlying pattern of results. This problem is examined by using hypothetical data and through the detailed analysis of the results from an experiment based on a recognition memory task used in several previous studies. Although a pattern of results that is consistent with the multiple-views hypothesis was observed in both the group mean performance and the underlying data, it is argued that the potential limitations of analyses based solely on group performance averages must be considered in future studies that use orientation effects to make inferences about the kinds of shape representations that mediate visual recognition.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Orientation Sensitivity at Different Stages of Object Processing: Evidence from Repetition Priming and Naming

Irina M. Harris; Paul E. Dux; Claire T. Benito; E. Charles Leek

Background An ongoing debate in the object recognition literature centers on whether the shape representations used in recognition are coded in an orientation-dependent or orientation-invariant manner. In this study, we asked whether the nature of the object representation (orientation-dependent vs orientation-invariant) depends on the information-processing stages tapped by the task. Methodology/ Findings We employed a repetition priming paradigm in which briefly presented masked objects (primes) were followed by an upright target object which had to be named as rapidly as possible. The primes were presented for variable durations (ranging from 16 to 350 ms) and in various image-plane orientations (from 0° to 180°, in 30° steps). Significant priming was obtained for prime durations above 70 ms, but not for prime durations of 16 ms and 47 ms, and did not vary as a function of prime orientation. In contrast, naming the same objects that served as primes resulted in orientation-dependent reaction time costs. Conclusions/Significance These results suggest that initial processing of object identity is mediated by orientation-independent information and that orientation costs in performance arise when objects are consolidated in visual short-term memory in order to be reported.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2003

Orientation invariance in visual object priming depends on prime-target asynchrony

Martin Arguin; E. Charles Leek

Two experiments are reported in which orientation effects on visual object recognition latency were examined. In Experiment 1, we assessed picture-naming performance as a function of image-plane stimulus orientation and found increasing response times with increased misorientation of the stimulus. In Experiment 2, we examined the repetition priming effect on the identification of upright targets as a function of prime orientation. With time delays of 100, 200, or 500 msec between the onset of the prime and that of the target (i.e., stimulus onset asynchrony [SOA]), the magnitude of the priming effect decreased with increasing misorientation of the prime. These results contrast with the orientationinvariant priming effects reported in some previous repetition priming studies. These investigations all used relatively long prime—target SOAs. Confirming the crucial role of the latter variable, Experiment 2 shows that the magnitude of the repetition priming effect is invariant across prime orientations with an SOA of 1,000 msec. The possible implications of the present observations with respect to the issue of orientation invariance versus dependency of the visual object recognition process are discussed.


Journal of Vision | 2012

Eye movement patterns during the recognition of three-dimensional objects: Preferential fixation of concave surface curvature minima

E. Charles Leek; Filipe Cristino; Lina I. Conlan; Candy Patterson; Elly Rodriguez; Stephen J. Johnston

This study used eye movement patterns to examine how high-level shape information is used during 3D object recognition. Eye movements were recorded while observers either actively memorized or passively viewed sets of novel objects, and then during a subsequent recognition memory task. Fixation data were contrasted against different algorithmically generated models of shape analysis based on: (1) regions of internal concave or (2) convex surface curvature discontinuity or (3) external bounding contour. The results showed a preference for fixation at regions of internal local features during both active memorization and passive viewing but also for regions of concave surface curvature during the recognition task. These findings provide new evidence supporting the special functional status of local concave discontinuities in recognition and show how studies of eye movement patterns can elucidate shape information processing in human vision.


Vision Research | 2007

Computational mechanisms of object constancy for visual recognition revealed by event-related potentials.

E. Charles Leek; Christine J. Atherton; Guillaume Thierry

This study examined the functional organisation of the computational processes underlying orientation-dependent and orientation-invariant two-dimensional object recognition. Participants identified two previously memorised novel shapes at different image plane orientations while event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded. A centro-parietal ERP component was found that peaked between 350 and 450 ms post-stimulus onset and whose amplitude was modulated by stimulus orientation only for objects showing an orientation effect in response times. These findings are consistent with a serial model of object recognition whereby object constancy is achieved in at least two successive steps: orientation-invariant feature extraction and orientation-dependent visuo-spatial transformation.


Neurocase | 2001

Superior Written Over Spoken Picture Naming in a Case of Frontotemporal Dementia

Marie-Josèphe Tainturier; Olivier Moreaud; Danielle David; E. Charles Leek; Jacques Pellat

Two main hypotheses have been proposed regarding the role of phonology in written word production. According to the phonological mediation hypothesis, the retrieval of the lexical phonological representation of a word is an obligatory prerequisite to the retrieval of its spelling. Therefore, deficits to the phonological lexicon should affect both spoken and written picture naming. In contrast, the orthographic autonomy hypothesis posits that the lexical orthographic representations of words can be accessed without any necessary phonological mediation. In support of this view, cases of preserved written naming despite impaired lexical phonology have been reported following brain damage. In this report, we replicate this basic pattern of performance in case YP, a 60-year-old woman with a pattern of frontotemporal dementia. As her disease progressed, YP’s ability to write down the names of pictures remained very good despite a severe decline in oral naming. Further testing indicated that this deficit was not primarily due to an articulatory or post-lexical phonological deficit. YP’s case provides strong additional support for the orthographic autonomy hypothesis. The significance of this case with respect to the characterization of dementia syndromes is discussed.

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Alan J. Pegna

University of Queensland

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Martin Arguin

Université de Montréal

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Christine J. Atherton

University of Central Lancashire

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