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Dive into the research topics where Martin Arguin is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Arguin.


Journal of Vision | 2005

Accurate statistical tests for smooth classification images

Alan Chauvin; Keith J. Worsley; Philippe G. Schyns; Martin Arguin; Fr!ed!eric Gosselin

Despite an obvious demand for a variety of statistical tests adapted to classification images, few have been proposed. We argue that two statistical tests based on random field theory (RFT) satisfy this need for smooth classification images. We illustrate these tests on classification images representative of the literature from F. Gosselin and P. G. Schyns (2001) and from A. B. Sekuler, C. M. Gaspar, J. M. Gold, and P. J. Bennett (2004). The necessary computations are performed using the Stat4Ci Matlab toolbox.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2006

Face perception in high-functioning autistic adults: evidence for superior processing of face parts, not for a configural face-processing deficit.

A. Lahaie; Laurent Mottron; Martin Arguin; Claude Berthiaume; Boutheina Jemel; D. Saumier

Configural processing in autism was studied in Experiment 1 by using the face inversion effect. A normal inversion effect was observed in the participants with autism, suggesting intact configural face processing. A priming paradigm using partial or complete faces served in Experiment 2 to assess both local and configural face processing. Overall, normal priming effects were found in participants with autism, irrespective of whether the partial face primes were intuitive face parts (i.e., eyes, nose, etc.) or arbitrary segments. An exception, however, was that participants with autism showed magnified priming with single face parts relative to typically developing control participants. The present findings argue for intact configural processing in autism along with an enhanced processing for individual face parts. The face-processing peculiarities known to characterize autism are discussed on the basis of these results and past congruent results with nonsocial stimuli.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 1990

Effect of surface medium on visual search for orientation and size features.

Patrick Cavanagh; Martin Arguin; Anne Treisman

By using a visual search task, this study examined the encoding of orientation and size for stimuli defined in five different surface media: luminance, color, texture, relative motion, and binocular disparity. Results indicated a spatially parallel analysis of size and orientation features for all surface media, with the possible exception of binocular disparity. The data also revealed a search rate asymmetry in the orientation task for all media: Parallel or shallow search functions were obtained for oblique targets in vertical distractors, whereas steeper serial search functions were obtained for vertical targets in oblique distractors. No consistent asymmetry was found for the large and small targets in the size task. There seemed to be common principles of coding in all these different media, suggesting either a single analysis of shape features applied to a common representation or multiple analyses, one for each surface medium, with each extracting a similar set of features. The shared coding principles may facilitate the use of redundancy across media to reduce ambiguities in the locations and shapes of contours in the visual scene.


Vision Research | 1989

Interattribute apparent motion

Patrick Cavanagh; Martin Arguin; Michael von Grünau

Apparent motion can be seen between two alternating stimuli even if they are defined with respect to their background by attributes other than luminance (such as color, or texture). We measured motion strength as the maximum separation between two alternating stimuli which produced an impression of motion, for conditions in which the two stimuli were defined by the same attribute (intra-attribute) as well as conditions in which they were defined by different attributes (interattribute). The attributes used to define the stimuli were luminance, color, texture, relative motion, or stereopsis. The results indicate that motion was seen for all the intra-attribute conditions about equally well. The results also show that interattribute motion could be seen for all combinations studied. The motion strength in these cases was about 80% of that for the intra-attribute conditions. The process responsible for this motion perception must therefore be able to combine information from different attributes.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 1993

Visual search for feature and conjunction targets with an attention deficit

Martin Arguin; Yves Joanette; Patrick Cavanagh

Brain-damaged subjects who had previously been identified as suffering from a visual attention deficit for contralesional stimulation were tested on a series of visual search tasks. The experiments examined the hypothesis that the processing of single features is preattentive but that feature integration, necessary for the correct perception of conjunctions of features, requires attention (Treisman & Gelade, 1980 Treisman & Sato, 1990). Subjects searched for a feature target (orientation or color) or for a conjunction target (orientation and color) in unilateral displays in which the number of items presented was variable. Ocular fixation was controlled so that trials on which eye movements occurred were cancelled. While brain-damaged subjects with a visual attention disorder (VAD subjects) performed similarly to normal controls in feature search tasks, they showed a marked deficit in conjunction search. Specifically, VAD subjects exhibited an important reduction of their serial search rates for a conjunction target with contralesional displays. In support of Treismans feature integration theory, a visual attention deficit leads to a marked impairment in feature integration whereas it does not appear to affect feature encoding.


Neuropsychologia | 1993

Single-character processing in a case of pure alexia

Martin Arguin; Daniel Bub

The processing of single characters in a pure alexic patient was studied in an attempt to identify the impairment responsible for his reading disorder. Observations from Experiments 1 to 4 suggested a deficit of identification of alphanumeric stimuli without any impairment affecting the elaboration of a structural description of visual stimulation. Experiment 5 indicated that the identification disorder results from a defect in the selective processes--activation and/or inhibition--that must come into play for achieving an appropriate match between a structural description of the stimulation and representations of the identities of known stimuli. The possible implications of this deficit in single-character identification for word reading are discussed.


Psychological Science | 2008

Features for Identification of Uppercase and Lowercase Letters

Daniel Fiset; Caroline Blais; Catherine Éthier-Majcher; Martin Arguin; Daniel N. Bub; Frédéric Gosselin

The determination of the visual features mediating letter identification has a long-standing history in cognitive science. Researchers have proposed many sets of letter features as important for letter identification, but no such sets have yet been derived directly from empirical data. In the study reported here, we applied the Bubbles technique to reveal directly which areas at five different spatial scales are efficient for the identification of lowercase and uppercase Arial letters. We provide the first empirical evidence that line terminations are the most important features for letter identification. We propose that these small features, represented at several spatial scales, help readers to discriminate among visually similar letters.


Neuropsychologia | 2012

The eyes are not the window to basic emotions

Caroline Blais; Cynthia Roy; Daniel Fiset; Martin Arguin; Frédéric Gosselin

Facial expressions are one of the most important ways to communicate our emotional state. In popular culture and in the scientific literature on face processing, the eye area is often conceived as a very important - if not the most important - cue for the recognition of facial expressions. In support of this, an underutilization of the eye area is often observed in clinical populations with a deficit in the recognition of facial expressions of emotions. Here, we used the Bubbles technique to verify which facial cue is the most important when it comes to discriminating between eight static and dynamic facial expressions (i.e., six basic emotions, pain and a neutral expression). We found that the mouth area is the most important cue for both static and dynamic facial expressions. We conducted an ideal observer analysis on the static expressions and determined that the mouth area is the most informative. However, we found an underutilization of the eye area by human participants in comparison to the ideal observer. We then demonstrated that the mouth area contains the most discriminative motions across expressions. We propose that the greater utilization of the mouth area by the human participants might come from remnants of the strategy the brain has developed with dynamic stimuli, and/or from a strategy whereby the most informative area is prioritized due to the limited capacity of the visuo-cognitive system.


Brain and Language | 1992

Contribution of articulatory rehearsal to short-term memory : evidence from a case of selective disruption

Sylvie Belleville; Isabelle Peretz; Martin Arguin

We describe a brain-damaged patient with disturbed articulatory rehearsal in whom all predictions derived from a working memory model were fulfilled. The patient showed a reduced verbal span, no word-length effect on immediate recall in both the visual or the auditory modalities, no phonological similarity effect in the visual modality, and no effect of articulatory suppression. A slowed overt articulation rate provided independent evidence for disrupted articulatory rehearsal. The other components of working memory, the visuospatial scratch-pad, phonological storage system, and central executive, were functional. The selectivity of the deficit can be taken as evidence for the specific role of articulatory rehearsal in working memory.


Cortex | 1993

Evidence for an Independent Stimuluscentered Spatial Reference Frame from a Case of Visual Hemineglect

Martin Arguin; Daniel Bub

Previous experiments with patients suffering from visual hemineglect have provided evidence relevant to the organization of the human spatial representation system. We examined the hypothesis that one reference frame used to represent the location of objects in the environment is based on the spatial extent of the stimulation that needs to be processed at a specific point in time; in current terminology, a stimulus-centered reference frame. The paradigm used was one of filtering, and variation of the location of the target within a horizontal array of items (stimulus-relative location) was independent of the target location relative to the subject and to stable reference points in the environment. Results showed that stimulus-relative target location provided an independent contribution to the magnitude of the neglect symptoms. This is taken as an indication that a stimulus-centered spatial reference frame contributes to the representation of the location of visual objects in human vision and that this representation may serve to direct visual attention.

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Daniel Fiset

Université du Québec en Outaouais

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Caroline Blais

Université du Québec en Outaouais

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Daniel Saumier

Université de Montréal

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Karine Tadros

Université de Montréal

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Alan Chauvin

Université de Montréal

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