05659nam 22007094a 450 991046513740332120200520144314.01-280-84384-50-19-534670-X1-4237-7559-7(CKB)2560000000299379(EBL)272672(OCoLC)69934087(SSID)ssj0000243418(PQKBManifestationID)11219729(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000243418(PQKBWorkID)10327326(PQKB)11026386(StDuBDS)EDZ0000023934(MiAaPQ)EBC272672(Au-PeEL)EBL272672(CaPaEBR)ebr10233672(CaONFJC)MIL84384(OCoLC)747086024(EXLCZ)99256000000029937920040716d2006 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrSeeing spatial form[electronic resource] /edited by Michael R.M. Jenkin, Laurence R. HarrisOxford ;New York Oxford University Press20061 online resource (464 p.)"This book is in appreciation of the contributions of David Martin Regan"--Pref.0-19-517288-4 0-19-984757-6 Includes bibliographical references and indexes."Selected publications of David Regan": p. 405-419.Contents; Contributors; 1 Seeing Spatial Form; 1.1 Processing by the Brain; 1.2 The Structure of This Book; I: Form Vision; 2 Pictorial Relief; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Some History; 2.3 Psychophysics: Methods; 2.4 Findings; 2.5 Geometry of Pictorial Space; 2.6 What Next?; 3 Geometry and Spatial Vision; 4 The Inputs to Global Form Detection; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Seeing Glass Patterns; 4.3 A Model of the Functional Architecture of Global Form Detection; 4.4 Conclusions; 5 Probability Multiplication as a New Principle in Psychophysics; 5.A1 Methods; 5.A2 Models and Theory6 Spatial Form as Inherently Three Dimensional 6.1 Surface Representation through the Attentional Shroud; 6.2 Interpolation of Object Shape within the Generic Depth Map; 6.3 Transparency; 6.4 Object-Oriented Constraints on Surface Reconstruction; 6.5 Conclusion; II: Motion and Color; 7 White's Effect in Lightness, Color, and Motion; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 Experiment 1. White's Effect Increases with Spatial Frequency; 7.3 Experiment 2. A Colored White's Effect Shows Both Contrast and Assimilation; 7.4 Experiment 3. Colored White's Effect: Spatial Frequency7.5 Experiment 4. An Isotropic Brightness Illusion: ""Stuart's Rings""7.6 Experiment 5. White's Effect and Apparent Motion; 8 The Processing of Motion-Defined Form; 8.1 The Motion-Defined Letter Test; 8.2 Dissociations Between Motion-Defined Form and Simple Motion Processing; 8.3 Role of the M/Dorsal Pathways in Motion-Defined Form Processing; 8.4 Conclusions; 9 Vision in Flying, Driving, and Sport; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Vision in Flying; 9.3 Vision in Driving; 9.4 Vision in Sports; 9.5 Conclusions; 10 Form-from-Watercolor in Surface Perception, and Old Maps; 10.1 Introduction10.2 General Methods 10.3 Experiment 1: How to Create Two Geographical Maps by Using One Boundary; 10.4 Experiment 2: Watercolor Effect vs. Proximity and Parallelism; 10.5 Experiment 3: Watercolor Effect vs. Good Continuation and Prägnanz; 10.6 Experiment 4: Watercolor Effect Used to Disambiguate Grouping and Figure-Ground Organization; 10.7 Experiment 5: Why Did the Old Maps Fail to Elicit Strong Long-Range Coloration Effects?; 10.8 Conclusion; III: Eye Movements; 11 The Basis of a Saccadic Decision: What We Can Learn from Visual Search and Visual Attention; 11.1 Prologue11.2 Saccadic Decisions 11.3 Search and Optimal Search; 11.4 Saccades during Natural Visual Tasks; 11.5 Saccades and Visual Search: An Investigation of the Costs of Planning a Rational Saccade; 11.6 The Role of Attention in the Programming of Saccades; 11.7 Saccadic Decisions, Search, and Attention; 11.8 Final Comments; 12 Handling Real Forms in Real Life; IV: Neural Basis of Form Vision; 13 The Processing of Spatial Form by the Human Brain Studied by Recording the Brain's Electrical and Magnetic Responses to Visual Stimuli; 13.1 Introduction; 13.2 Human Brain Electrophysiology: The Early Days13.3 My Introduction to the Mathematical Analysis of Nonlinear Behavior and to the Joys of Collaborative Research1. Seeing Spatial Form Part I. Form Vision 2. Pictorial relief 3. Geometry and spatial vision 4. The inputs to global form detection 5. Probability multiplication as a new principle in psychophysics 6. Spatial form as inherently three-dimensional Part II. Motion and Color 7. White's effect in lightness, color, and motion 8. The processing of motion-defined form 9. Vision in flying, driving, and sport 10. Form-from-watercolor in surface perception and old maps Part III. Eye Movements 11. The basis of saccadic decision: What we can learn from visual search and visual attention12. Handling real forms inForm perceptionSpace perceptionElectronic books.Form perception.Space perception.152.14Regan D(David),1935-900410Jenkin Michael1959-146734Harris Laurence1953-127218MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910465137403321Seeing spatial form2011588UNINA