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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Zenon_Pylyshyn
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dbr:Visual_indexing_theory
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Visual indexing theory
rdfs:comment
Visual Indexing Theory (also called ) is an account of early visual perception developed by Zenon Pylyshyn in the 1980s. It proposes apre-attentive mechanism (a ‘FINST’) whose function is to individuate salient elements of a visual scene, and track their locations across space and time. Developed in response to what Pylyshyn viewed as limitations of prominent theories of visual perception at the time, visual indexing theory is supported by several lines of empirical evidence.
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Visual Indexing Theory (also called ) is an account of early visual perception developed by Zenon Pylyshyn in the 1980s. It proposes apre-attentive mechanism (a ‘FINST’) whose function is to individuate salient elements of a visual scene, and track their locations across space and time. Developed in response to what Pylyshyn viewed as limitations of prominent theories of visual perception at the time, visual indexing theory is supported by several lines of empirical evidence.
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