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Visual Expertise Is a General Skill

Visual Expertise Is a General Skill. Maki Sugimoto University of California, San Diego November 17, 2000. Overview. Is the Fusiform Face Area (FFA) really a face specific area? Our results support the view that it is NOT Motivation : Evidence for/against the face specific view

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Visual Expertise Is a General Skill

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  1. Visual Expertise Is a General Skill Maki Sugimoto University of California, San Diego November 17, 2000

  2. Overview Is the Fusiform Face Area (FFA) really a face specific area? Our results support the view that it is NOT • Motivation :Evidence for/against the face specific view • Our Approach :Our model and experimental design • Results • Conclusion

  3. Motivation: Evidence for the Face Specific View • Prosopagnosia patients may have deficit in identifying individual faces but normal in detecting faces or other non-face objects, while visual object agnosia patients may be normal with face recognition but have deficit with reading or object recognition. • Recognition of faces is more sensitive to configural changes than objects. Face and non-face objects have separate processing mechanisms

  4. Motivation: Evidence against the face specific view • Gauthier et al. points out faces and objects differ not only in the image geometries, but also in … • Level of discrimination • Level of experience We are face “experts”. • FFA showed high activation for a wide variety of non-objects when these two conditions were controlled.

  5. Greeble Experts (Gauthier et al. 1999) • Activation of the FFA increased when Greebles were presented as the training proceeded. • When subjects met the criteria of experts, the activation level differences between faces and Greebles were insignificant.

  6. Our Hypothesis Why does the FFA engage in expert classification of non-face objects as well? • We hypothesized that the FFA responds to visual features that are generally useful in discriminating homogeneous input images. • Expertise on one class should facilitate the learning of other expert tasks.

  7. cup Carol can Bob Ted can cup book book face Greeble3 Greeble2 Greeble1 Greeble3 Greeble2 Greeble1 Model (Experts) • Pretrain two groups of neural networks on different tasks. • Compare the abilities to learn a new individual Greeble classification task. (Non-experts) Hidden layer

  8. Database • 64x64 8bit grayscale • 5 basic categories • 12 individuals per category • 5 different images per individual • Total of 5x12x5=300 images

  9. Preprocessing • Form Gabor jets using 8 orientations and 5 scales, then subsample on a 8x8 grid. • For each scale, apply PCA separately and reduce dimensionality to 5. • 8x5x64=2560 5x8=40 dimensions

  10. can cup can cup book face book face1 face2 face3 Experimental Setting Details Pretraining tasks Fixed configurations: • 1 hidden layer with 40 units • Learning rate = .005 • Momentum = .5 Controlled condition: • 30 training patterns for each basic class (Experts) face10 (Non-experts)

  11. Training Set Variations Holdout Training set Test Training set: • 10 individual for each class, 3 images for each individual Hold out / test set: • Basic level: 3 images of unseen individual • Individual level: 1 unseen image of each individual 10 (indiv.) Holdout (basic) Test

  12. Topics for Analysis • Will the experts learn the new task faster? • Is there a correlation between network plasticity and the speed to learn the new task? Network plasticity can be defined as the average “slope” coefficient of the hidden layer units.

  13. Criteria to Stop Training • Fixed RMSE threshold • Number of training epochs • Best holdout set performance • We eliminated the third criterion due to extremely high variance in number of training epochs observed in preliminary studies.

  14. Experiment 1 (Design) • For each pretraining task, 20 networks were trained, i.e. 20 book experts, 20 face experts, etc. • Training set RMSE threshold was fixed to: • .08 (pretraining) • .158 (after new task added) • The threholds were derived from preliminary cross-validation experiments on the most difficult task, i.e. face expert classification.

  15. Experiment 1 (Results) Number of Epochs to Achieve RMSE Threshold • Pretraining tasks were much harder for the experts. • Non-experts were significantly slower in learning the new task than any of the experts.

  16. Experiment 2 (Design) • For each pretraining task, 10 networks for trained for 5120 epochs. • Intermediate weights were recorded at epochs 5,10, 20, ... , 2560. • Total of 11x10=110 networks were trained on the new task with RMSE threshold .158.

  17. Experiment 2 (Results) Pretraining Epochs and the Speed to Learn New Task • Non-experts were the slowest to learn the new task, provided that the pretraining tasks were fully acquired.

  18. Experiment 2 (Results) • If the pretraining were stopped prematurely, the networks must continue improving on the pretrained classes as well as the new task. Pretraining RMSE

  19. Analysis of Network Plasticity • Network plasticity can be defined as the average “slope” coefficient across all hidden layer units and all patterns in a given set of patterns: where

  20. Network Plasticity • Plasticity was lower for the experts! • It is more appropriate to interpret plasticity as a measurement of mismatch.

  21. Conclusion • Expert networks learned the new task faster. • Expert networks learned faster despite the low plasticity, further supporting the claim that the hidden layer representation developed for one expert class are general features that are useful for classifying other classes as well. Visual expertise is a general skill that is not specific to any class of images including faces.

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