A saliency-based search mechanism for overt and covert shifts of visual attention

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Abstract

Most models of visual search, whether involving overt eye movements or covert shifts of attention, are based on the concept of a saliency map, that is, an explicit two-dimensional map that encodes the saliency or conspicuity of objects in the visual environment. Competition among neurons in this map gives rise to a single winning location that corresponds to the next attended target. Inhibiting this location automatically allows the system to attend to the next most salient location. We describe a detailed computer implementation of such a scheme, focusing on the problem of combining information across modalities, here orientation, intensity and color information, in a purely stimulus-driven manner. The model is applied to common psychophysical stimuli as well as to a very demanding visual search task. Its successful performance is used to address the extent to which the primate visual system carries out visual search via one or more such saliency maps and how this can be tested. Copyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.

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APA

Itti, L., & Koch, C. (2000). A saliency-based search mechanism for overt and covert shifts of visual attention. In Vision Research (Vol. 40, pp. 1489–1506). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0042-6989(99)00163-7

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