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Dive into the research topics where Everett Mettler is active.

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Featured researches published by Everett Mettler.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Forensic comparison and matching of fingerprints: using quantitative image measures for estimating error rates through understanding and predicting difficulty.

Philip J. Kellman; Jennifer L. Mnookin; Gennady Erlikhman; Patrick Garrigan; Tandra Ghose; Everett Mettler; David Charlton; Itiel E. Dror

Latent fingerprint examination is a complex task that, despite advances in image processing, still fundamentally depends on the visual judgments of highly trained human examiners. Fingerprints collected from crime scenes typically contain less information than fingerprints collected under controlled conditions. Specifically, they are often noisy and distorted and may contain only a portion of the total fingerprint area. Expertise in fingerprint comparison, like other forms of perceptual expertise, such as face recognition or aircraft identification, depends on perceptual learning processes that lead to the discovery of features and relations that matter in comparing prints. Relatively little is known about the perceptual processes involved in making comparisons, and even less is known about what characteristics of fingerprint pairs make particular comparisons easy or difficult. We measured expert examiner performance and judgments of difficulty and confidence on a new fingerprint database. We developed a number of quantitative measures of image characteristics and used multiple regression techniques to discover objective predictors of error as well as perceived difficulty and confidence. A number of useful predictors emerged, and these included variables related to image quality metrics, such as intensity and contrast information, as well as measures of information quantity, such as the total fingerprint area. Also included were configural features that fingerprint experts have noted, such as the presence and clarity of global features and fingerprint ridges. Within the constraints of the overall low error rates of experts, a regression model incorporating the derived predictors demonstrated reasonable success in predicting objective difficulty for print pairs, as shown both in goodness of fit measures to the original data set and in a cross validation test. The results indicate the plausibility of using objective image metrics to predict expert performance and subjective assessment of difficulty in fingerprint comparisons.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 2011

Attentional signatures of perception: multiple object tracking reveals the automaticity of contour interpolation.

Brian P. Keane; Everett Mettler; Vicky Tsoi; Philip J. Kellman


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 2013

Automatic feature-based grouping during multiple object tracking.

Gennady Erlikhman; Brian P. Keane; Everett Mettler; Todd S. Horowitz; Philip J. Kellman


Grantee Submission | 2011

Improving Adaptive Learning Technology through the Use of Response Times.

Everett Mettler; Christine Massey; Philip J. Kellman


Vision Research | 2014

Adaptive response-time-based category sequencing in perceptual learning

Everett Mettler; Philip J. Kellman


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2016

A comparison of adaptive and fixed schedules of practice.

Everett Mettler; Christine Massey; Philip J. Kellman


Cognitive Science | 2011

Improving Adaptive Learning Technology through the Use of Response Times

Everett Mettler; Christine Massey; Philip J. Kellman


Journal of Vision | 2010

Adaptive Sequencing in Perceptual Learning

Everett Mettler; Philip J. Kellman


Cognitive Science | 2011

Basic Information Processing Effects from Perceptual Learning in Complex, Real-World Domains

Khanh-Phuong Thai; Everett Mettler; Philip J. Kellman


Journal of Vision | 2010

Concrete and Abstract Perceptual Learning without Conscious Awareness

Everett Mettler; Philip J. Kellman

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Christine Massey

University of Pennsylvania

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Todd S. Horowitz

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Hongjing Lu

University of California

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