The feeling of seeing whole scene {scene, vision} {vision, scene} results from maintaining general scene sense in semantic memory, attending repeatedly to scene objects, and forming object patterns. Vision experiences whole scene (perceptual field), not just isolated points, features, surfaces, or objects. Perceptual field provides background and context, which can identify objects and events.
scale
Scenes have different spatial frequencies in different directions and distances. Scenes can have low spatial frequency and seem open. Low-spatial-frequency scenes have more depth, less expansiveness, and less roughness, and are more natural. Scenes can have high spatial frequency and seem closed. High-spatial-frequency scenes have less depth, more expansiveness, and more roughness, and are more about towns.
Scenes have numbers of objects {set size, scene}.
Scenes have patterns or structures of object and object-property placeholders {spatial layout}, such as smooth texture, rough texture, enclosed space, and open space. In spatial layouts, object and property meanings do not matter, only placeholder pattern. Objects and properties can fill object and object property placeholders to supply meaning. Objects have spatial positions, and relations to other objects, that depend on spacing and order. Spatial relations include object and part separations, feature and part conjunctions, movement and orientation directions, and object resolution.
Scenes have homogeneous color and texture regions {visual unit}.
1-Consciousness-Sense-Vision-Pattern Recognition
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Date Modified: 2022.0225