84th CiNet Monthly Seminar: Chien-Chung Chen "Divisive inhibition as a solution to the correspondence problem in perceptual organization"

CiNet Monthly Seminar

Feb. 6 (Fri.), 2026
16:00-17:00 (JST)
at the Conference Room in the CiNet bldg.

Talk title: Divisive inhibition as a solution to the correspondence problem in perceptual organization

Chien-Chung Chen
Distinguished Professor
Department of Psychology, National Taiwan University
Taiwan

Host : Pei-Yin Chen

Abstract:
To perceive an object in a scene, the visual system needs to integrate local image elements together for a coherent percept. However, in any sufficiently complex scene, there are multiple possible ways to organize local elements. Hence, it is a challenge for the visual system to find the right correspondence among local elements. For instance, to perceive symmetry, the visual system needs to find correspondence between image elements across a symmetry axis. However, if the location and orientation of the symmetry axis are unknown, the midpoint between any pair of image elements is a candidate for a symmetry axis. We measured symmetry detection across various contexts and varying levels of axis-orientation uncertainty. Our result was best described by a multiple channel model in which each channel tunes to a specific axis orientation. The response of each channel is the number of corresponding elements consistent with the tuned symmetry axis divided by an inhibition signal from other channels. Similar results and computation principles are also found in contour integration, Glass pattern perception, and Ebbinghaus size illusion. Thus, divisive inhibition, which was originally proposed to explain phenomena in the contrast domain, is ubiquitous in perceptual grouping. It serves to suppress unwanted groupings and to ensure the emergence of the right ones.