arXiv Open Access 2026

From edges to meaning: Semantic line sketches as a cognitive scaffold for ancient pictograph invention

Seowung Leem Lin Gu Ruogu Fang
Lihat Sumber

Abstrak

Humans readily recognize objects from sparse line drawings, a capacity that appears early in development and persists across cultures, suggesting neural rather than purely learned origins. Yet the computational mechanism by which the brain transforms high-level semantic knowledge into low-level visual symbols remains poorly understood. Here we propose that ancient pictographic writing emerged from the brain's intrinsic tendency to compress visual input into stable, boundary-based abstractions. We construct a biologically inspired digital twin of the visual hierarchy that encodes an image into low-level features, generates a contour sketch, and iteratively refines it through top-down feedback guided by semantic representations, mirroring the feedforward and recurrent architecture of the human visual cortex. The resulting symbols bear striking structural resemblance to early pictographs across culturally distant writing systems, including Egyptian hieroglyphs, Chinese oracle bone characters, and proto-cuneiform, and offer candidate interpretations for undeciphered scripts. Our findings support a neuro-computational origin of pictographic writing and establish a framework in which AI can recapitulate the cognitive processes by which humans first externalized perception into symbols.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (3)

S

Seowung Leem

L

Lin Gu

R

Ruogu Fang

Format Sitasi

Leem, S., Gu, L., Fang, R. (2026). From edges to meaning: Semantic line sketches as a cognitive scaffold for ancient pictograph invention. https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.12865

Akses Cepat

Lihat di Sumber
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2026
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
arXiv
Akses
Open Access ✓