Evidence of change blindness in subjective image fidelity assessment
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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Date
2017Metadata
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Original version
Proceedings of IEEE international conference on image processing. 2017, 3155-3159. 10.1109/ICIP.2017.8296864Abstract
Change blindness is a striking phenomenon which basically means that we can look without seeing. It originates from a faulty communication between early vision (the eye) and visual working memory (the brain). In this paper, we present evidence that this faulty communication needs to be accounted for in image fidelity assessment (also known as full-reference image quality assessment). We designed a user study to analyse participants opinions based on how much they have to rely on their visual working memory in order to give fidelity score. Results demonstrate that significantly more severe judgments were made when reliance on visual short-term memory was minimal, suggesting limitations in the observers' ability to notice image differences in the typical pairwise comparison setup. Furthermore, a comparison of the efficiency of six state-of-the-art image fidelity assessment models (so-called metrics) reveals that five of them perform significantly better at predicting results obtained when reliance on memory is minimal.