Jacob R. Cheeseman
Western Kentucky University
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Featured researches published by Jacob R. Cheeseman.
Experimental Brain Research | 2012
J. Farley Norman; Flip Phillips; Jessica Holmin; Hideko F. Norman; Amanda M. Beers; Alexandria Boswell; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Angela G. Stethen; Cecilia Ronning
A set of three experiments evaluated 96 participants’ ability to visually and haptically discriminate solid object shape. In the past, some researchers have found haptic shape discrimination to be substantially inferior to visual shape discrimination, while other researchers have found haptics and vision to be essentially equivalent. A primary goal of the present study was to understand these discrepant past findings and to determine the true capabilities of the haptic system. All experiments used the same task (same vs. different shape discrimination) and stimulus objects (James Gibson’s “feelies” and a set of naturally shaped objects—bell peppers). However, the methodology varied across experiments. Experiment 1 used random 3-dimensional (3-D) orientations of the stimulus objects, and the conditions were full-cue (active manipulation of objects and rotation of the visual objects in depth). Experiment 2 restricted the 3-D orientations of the stimulus objects and limited the haptic and visual information available to the participants. Experiment 3 compared restricted and full-cue conditions using random 3-D orientations. We replicated both previous findings in the current study. When we restricted visual and haptic information (and placed the stimulus objects in the same orientation on every trial), the participants’ visual performance was superior to that obtained for haptics (replicating the earlier findings of Davidson et al. in Percept Psychophys 15(3):539–543, 1974). When the circumstances resembled those of ordinary life (e.g., participants able to actively manipulate objects and see them from a variety of perspectives), we found no significant difference between visual and haptic solid shape discrimination.
PLOS ONE | 2013
J. Farley Norman; Astrid M. L. Kappers; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Cecilia Ronning; Kelsey E. Thomason; Michael W. Baxter; Autum B. Calloway; Davora Lamirande
Two experiments evaluated the ability of 30 older and younger adults to discriminate the curvature of simple object surfaces from static and dynamic touch. The ages of the older adults ranged from 66 to 85 years, while those of the younger adults ranged from 20 to 29 years. For each participant in both experiments, the minimum curvature magnitude needed to reliably discriminate between convex and concave surfaces was determined. In Experiment 1, participants used static touch to make their judgments of curvature, while dynamic touch was used in Experiment 2. When static touch was used to discriminate curvature, a large effect of age occurred (the thresholds were 0.67 & 1.11/m for the younger and older participants, respectively). However, when participants used dynamic touch, there was no significant difference between the ability of younger and older participants to discriminate curvature (the thresholds were 0.58 & 0.59/m for the younger and older participants, respectively). The results of the current study demonstrate that while older adults can accurately discriminate surface curvature from dynamic touch, they possess significant impairments for static touch.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Jacob R. Cheeseman; J. Farley Norman; Astrid M. L. Kappers
Our tactual perceptual experiences occur when we interact, actively and passively, with environmental objects and surfaces. Previous research has demonstrated that active manual exploration often enhances the tactual perception of object shape. Nevertheless, the factors that contribute to this enhancement are not well understood. The present study evaluated the ability of 28 younger (mean age was 23.1 years) and older adults (mean age was 71.4 years) to discriminate curved surfaces by actively feeling objects with a single index finger and by passively feeling objects that moved relative to a restrained finger. While dynamic cutaneous stimulation was therefore present in both conditions, active exploratory movements only occurred in one. The results indicated that there was a significant and large effect of age, such that the older participants’ thresholds were 43.8 percent higher than those of the younger participants. Despite the overall adverse effect of age, the pattern of results across the active and passive touch conditions was identical. For both age groups, the curvature discrimination thresholds obtained for passive touch were significantly lower than those that occurred during active touch. Curvature discrimination performance was therefore best in the current study when dynamic cutaneous stimulation occurred in the absence of active movement.
PLOS ONE | 2016
J. Farley Norman; Flip Phillips; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Kelsey E. Thomason; Cecilia Ronning; Kriti Behari; Kayla Kleinman; Autum B. Calloway; Davora Lamirande
It is well known that motion facilitates the visual perception of solid object shape, particularly when surface texture or other identifiable features (e.g., corners) are present. Conventional models of structure-from-motion require the presence of texture or identifiable object features in order to recover 3-D structure. Is the facilitation in 3-D shape perception similar in magnitude when surface texture is absent? On any given trial in the current experiments, participants were presented with a single randomly-selected solid object (bell pepper or randomly-shaped “glaven”) for 12 seconds and were required to indicate which of 12 (for bell peppers) or 8 (for glavens) simultaneously visible objects possessed the same shape. The initial single object’s shape was defined either by boundary contours alone (i.e., presented as a silhouette), specular highlights alone, specular highlights combined with boundary contours, or texture. In addition, there was a haptic condition: in this condition, the participants haptically explored with both hands (but could not see) the initial single object for 12 seconds; they then performed the same shape-matching task used in the visual conditions. For both the visual and haptic conditions, motion (rotation in depth or active object manipulation) was present in half of the trials and was not present for the remaining trials. The effect of motion was quantitatively similar for all of the visual and haptic conditions–e.g., the participants’ performance in Experiment 1 was 93.5 percent higher in the motion or active haptic manipulation conditions (when compared to the static conditions). The current results demonstrate that deforming specular highlights or boundary contours facilitate 3-D shape perception as much as the motion of objects that possess texture. The current results also indicate that the improvement with motion that occurs for haptics is similar in magnitude to that which occurs for vision.
Vision Research | 2013
J. Farley Norman; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Jessica Pyles; Michael W. Baxter; Kelsey E. Thomason; Autum B. Calloway
Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2012
J. Farley Norman; Jessica Holmin; Amanda M. Beers; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Cecilia Ronning; Angela G. Stethen; Adam L. Frost
Vision Research | 2015
J. Farley Norman; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Olivia C. Adkins; Andrea G. Cox; Connor Rogers; Catherine J. Dowell; Michael W. Baxter; Hideko F. Norman; Cecia M. Reyes
Vision Research | 2014
J. Farley Norman; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Michael W. Baxter; Kelsey E. Thomason; Olivia C. Adkins; Connor Rogers
Journal of Vision | 2012
Jacob R. Cheeseman; J. Farley Norman; Jessica Pyles; Michael W. Baxter; Kelsey E. Thomason; Autum B. Calloway
Journal of Vision | 2015
J. Farley Norman; Jacob R. Cheeseman; Olivia C. Adkins; Connor Rogers; Andrea G. Cox; Michael W. Baxter; Hideko F. Norman