04417oam 2200661Ka 450 991080738210332120190503073356.00-262-30932-71-283-11912-997866131191240-262-29555-5(CKB)2670000000092751(EBL)3339228(OCoLC)741452452(SSID)ssj0000524755(PQKBManifestationID)12222181(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000524755(PQKBWorkID)10488183(PQKB)10601445(OCoLC)727944876(OCoLC)961612461(OCoLC)962614403(OCoLC)975244841(OCoLC)975300480(OCoLC)988520040(OCoLC)991996157(OCoLC)994979762(OCoLC)1004443678(OCoLC)1004783184(OCoLC)1008902842(OCoLC)1013724596(OCoLC)1017956193(OCoLC)1021226046(OCoLC)1055391110(OCoLC)1065689599(OCoLC)1081280987(OCoLC-P)727944876(MaCbMITP)8594(Au-PeEL)EBL3339228(CaPaEBR)ebr10476080(CaONFJC)MIL311912(MiAaPQ)EBC3339228(EXLCZ)99267000000009275120110601d2010 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrPerception beyond inference the information content of visual processes /edited by Liliana Albertazzi, Gert J. van Tonder, and Dhanraj VishwanathCambridge, Mass. MIT Press©20101 online resource (462 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-262-01502-1 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Cover; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 Vision and Information; I Time and Dynamics; 2 Riddle of the Past, Puzzle for the Future; 3 Extending Prägnanz; 4 Informing through an Imperfect Retina; 5 Perceptual Organization in the Visual Cortex; II Color, Shape, and Space; 6 The Perception of Material Qualities and the Internal Semantics of the Perceptual System; 7 Visual Information in Surface and Depth Perception; 8 Good Continuation in Layers; 9 Illusory Contours and Neon Color Spreading Reconsidered in the Light of Petter's Rule; III Language and Perception10 From Grouping to Visual Meanings11 The Perceptual Roots of Metaphor; IV Perception in Art, Design, and Computation; 12 Becoming Information; 13 Becoming; Contributors; Author Index; Subject Index; InsertProposing a new paradigm for perceptual science that goes beyond standard information theory and digital computation. This book breaks with the conventional model of perception that views vision as a mere inference to an objective reality on the basis of "inverse optics." The authors offer the alternative view that perception is an expressive and awareness-generating process. Perception creates semantic information in such a way as to enable the observer to deal efficaciously with the chaotic and meaningless structure present at the physical boundary between the body and its surroundings. Vision is intentional by its very nature; visual qualities are essential and real, providing an aesthetic and meaningful interface to the structures of physics and the state of the brain. This view brings perception firmly in line with ethology and modern evolutionary biology and suggests new approaches in all disciplines that study, or require an understanding of, the ontology of mind.The book is the joint effort of a multidisciplinary group of authors. Topics covered include the relationships among stimuli, neuronal processes, and visual awareness. After considering the mind-dependent growing of information, the book treats time and dynamics; color, shape, and space; language and perception; perception, art, and design.Visual perceptionCognitive neuroscienceCOGNITIVE SCIENCES/GeneralNEUROSCIENCE/Visual NeuroscienceVisual perception.Cognitive neuroscience.152.14Albertazzi Liliana66513Van Tonder Gert J.1970-1633713Vishwanath Dhanraj1967-1633714OCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910807382103321Perception beyond inference3973596UNINA