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- Q1469792 subject Q6163947.
- Q1469792 subject Q8275282.
- Q1469792 subject Q8386413.
- Q1469792 abstract "The salience (also called saliency) of an item – be it an object, a person, a pixel, etc. – is the state or quality by which it stands out relative to its neighbors. Saliency detection is considered to be a key attentional mechanism that facilitates learning and survival by enabling organisms to focus their limited perceptual and cognitive resources on the most pertinent subset of the available sensory data.Saliency typically arises from contrasts between items and their neighborhood, such as a red dot surrounded by white dots, a flickering message indicator of an answering machine, or a loud noise in an otherwise quiet environment. Saliency detection is often studied in the context of the visual system, but similar mechanisms operate in other sensory systems. What is salient can be influenced by training: for example, for human subjects particular letters can become salient by training.When attention deployment is driven by salient stimuli, it is considered to be bottom-up, memory-free, and reactive. Attention can also be guided by top-down, memory-dependent, or anticipatory mechanisms, such as when looking ahead of moving objects or sideways before crossing streets. Humans and other animals have difficulty paying attention to more than one item simultaneously, so they are faced with the challenge of continuously integrating and prioritizing different bottom-up and top-down influences.".
- Q1469792 wikiPageExternalLink Saliency_map.
- Q1469792 wikiPageExternalLink ilab.usc.edu.
- Q1469792 wikiPageExternalLink Visual_Salience.
- Q1469792 wikiPageExternalLink Saliency_ICPR_2012.pdf.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q11081.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q1242622.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q133500.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q1429000.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q160402.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q162668.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q184215.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q2167279.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q2200417.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q2603645.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q2744408.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q3099410.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q41112.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q415496.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q42848.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q48360.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q492.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q6163947.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q6501146.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q6501338.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8275282.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8386413.
- Q1469792 wikiPageWikiLink Q842160.
- Q1469792 comment "The salience (also called saliency) of an item – be it an object, a person, a pixel, etc. – is the state or quality by which it stands out relative to its neighbors.".
- Q1469792 label "Salience (neuroscience)".