Information for "Biology:Visual indexing theory"

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Display titleBiology:Visual indexing theory
Default sort keyVisual indexing theory
Page length (in bytes)22,827
Namespace ID3026
NamespaceBiology
Page ID827184
Page content languageen - English
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Page creatorimported>John Stpola
Date of page creation08:17, 13 February 2024
Latest editorimported>John Stpola
Date of latest edit08:17, 13 February 2024
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Visual indexing theory, also known as FINST theory, is a theory of early visual perception developed by Zenon Pylyshyn in the 1980s. It proposes a pre-attentive mechanism (a ‘FINST’) whose function is to individuate salient elements of a visual scene, and track their locations across space and time.
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