The thinking eye, the seeing brain: explorations in visual cognition
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY [u.a.]
Norton
2004
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Ausgabe: | 1. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Getr. Zählung Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0393977218 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The thinking eye, the seeing brain |b explorations in visual cognition |c James T. Enns |
250 | |a 1. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a New York, NY [u.a.] |b Norton |c 2004 | |
300 | |a Getr. Zählung |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
650 | 7 | |a Cognitieve psychologie |2 gtt | |
650 | 7 | |a Denken |2 swd | |
650 | 7 | |a Kognitive Psychologie |2 swd | |
650 | 7 | |a Percepção visual |2 larpcal | |
650 | 7 | |a Sehen |2 swd | |
650 | 7 | |a Visuele waarneming |2 gtt | |
650 | 7 | |a Visuelle Wahrnehmung |2 swd | |
650 | 7 | |a Visão |2 larpcal | |
650 | 4 | |a Optical Illusions |x physiology | |
650 | 4 | |a Visual Perception |x physiology | |
650 | 4 | |a Visual perception | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | JAMES T. ENNS U N I V E R S I T Y O F B R I T I S H C O L U M B I A *THE
THINKING EYE THE SEEING BRAIN ^EXPLORATIONS IN VISUAL C O G N I T I O N
BRIEF CONTENTS PREFACE. XV 1 WHAT IS VISION SCIENCE? 2 2 EYE AND BRAIN
34 3 COLOR 78 4 EDGES 120 5 OBJECTS 164 6 TIME 216 7 SPACE 256 8
IMAGINATION 310 9 CONSCIOUSNESS 352 GLOSSARY G1-G12 REFERENCES R1-R6
CREDITS CR1-CR2 AUTHOR INDEX AI1-AI4 SUBJECT INDEX SH-SI20 COLOR
APPENDIX A1-A20 VI CONTENTS PREFACE XV WHAT IS VISION SCIENCE? SEEING
AND THINKING 3 WHAT VISION IS NOT 4 THE MYTH OF SEEING AS A FAITHFUL
RECORD 4 THE MYTH OF VISION AS A PASSIVE PROCESS 7 THE MYTH OF THE
SEEING EYE 10 THE MYTH OF IMAGELESS THOUGHT 12 WHAT IS VISION FOR? 13
BOX 1.1 SUBJECTIVE VERSUS ARBITRARY PERCEPTIONS 16 WHO ARE THE
VISION SCIENTISTS? 17 OPHTHALMOLOGISTS AND OPTOMETRISTS 18
NEUROSCIENTISTS, NEUROLOGISTS, AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGISTS 19 COGNITIVE
PSYCHOLOGISTS, PSYCHOPHYSICISTS, AND COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENTISTS 20
COMPUTER SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS 21 MEASUREMENT IN VISION SCIENCE 23
LIGHT 23 THE VISUAL STIMULUS 28 HUMAN BEHAVIOR 29 ARE YOU READY? 32
FURTHER READING 33 EYE AND BRAIN TOOLS OF THE TRADE, REVERSE ENGINEERS,
AND EMPTY BOXES 36 LESSONS OF THE MIGRAINE AURA 40 NEURAL ACTIVITY
CANNOT BE EXPERIENCED 42 SEEING DOES NOT REQUIRE THE EYES 43 VISUAL
MAPPING IN THE EYE AND BRAIN 44 BOX 2.1 SEEING YOUR OWN BLINDSPOT AND
FILLING IT IN 45 34 VII VIII CONTENTS UP AND DOWN THE CORTICAL HIERARCHY
51 THE ANATOMICAL HIERARCHY 51 THE TEMPORAL HIERARCHY 54 DYNAMIC
RECEPTIVE FIELDS 55 BOX 2.2 EXPERIENCING THE EFFECTS OF VISIBLE
PERSISTENCE 57 VISION WITHOUT SOME PARTS OF THE BRAIN 59 BLINDSIGHT 59
NEGLECT AND EXTINCTION 62 BALINT SYNDROME 67 CEREBRAL ACHROMATOPSIA 68
BOX 2.3 SEARCHING FOR FEATURE COMBINATIONS 69 MOTION BLINDNESS 71
CHARLES BONNET SYNDROME 73 IS IT ENOUGH? 74 FURTHER READING 75 COLOR 78
WHY DOES THE SKY LOOK BLUE? 79 COLOR CONSTANCY: SUPERFICIAL LIGHT AND
ENDURING SURFACES 81 BOX 3.1 COLOR CONSTANCY REVEALED WITH OVERHEAD
TRANSPARENCIES 85 WHAT DOES THE VISUAL SYSTEM DO WITH WAVELENGTH? 86
COLOR IN THE EYE 87 BOX 3.2 CREATING METAMERS USING A DESKTOP COMPUTER
90 COLOR IN THE BRAIN 94 THE HUMAN RESPONSE TO COLOR 98 HOW MANY COLORS
ARE THERE? 98 COLOR NAMES 98 COLOR SPACES 99 BOX 3.3 EXPLORING THE COLOR
GAMUT OF A DESKTOP COMPUTER 106 COLOR MIXING 107 COLOR STRANGERS AMONG
US 108 GETTING BY WITHOUT THE THIRD CONE: DICHROMATS 108 ADDING A FOURTH
CONE: TETRACHROMATIC SUPERWOMEN 110 LEARNING ABOUT COLOR THROUGH PLAY
113 ILLUSIONS OF COLOR CONTRAST AND AVERAGING 113 NEON COLOR ILLUSIONS
114 THE WATERCOLOR ILLUSION 115 CONTENTS IX DO WE KNOW THEM BY THEIR
COLOR? 116 WHAT IS COLOR FOR? 117 FURTHER READING 118 EDGES 120 THE
IMPOSSIBILITY OF READING BY MOONLIGHT 121 WHAT IS AN EDGE? 122 THE
LUMINANCE PROFILE 123 G SPATIAL FREQUENCY 125 BOX 4.1 SEEING YOUR OWN
CONTRAST SENSITIVITY FUNCTION 126 WHAT DOES THE VISUAL SYSTEM DO WITH
EDGES? 126 RODS AND CONES 127 BOX 4.2 VISON WITHOUT EDGES 129 GANGLION
CELLS 134 BOX 4.3 MEASURING THE USEFUL FIELD OF VIEW 135 LOWER BRAIN
STRUCTURES 138 VISUAL CORTEX 141 THE HUMAN RESPONSE TO EDGES 145
CONGENITAL ACHROMATOPSIA: CHRONIC READING BY MOONLIGHT 145 HERMANN GRID:
EDGE ENHANCEMENT AT WORK 148 CONNECTING THE DOTS: EDGE INTERACTIONS 150
SUBJECTIVE EDGES: SEEING EDGES THAT AREN T THERE 150 EDGES INFLUENCE
BRIGHTNESS PERCEPTION 152 PERCEPTION BY EDGES ALONE 153 ARE LINE
DRAWINGS ENOUGH? 153 ART AND THE CARTOON ADVANTAGE 155 BOX 4.4 USING A
WINDOW TO CREATE A LINE DRAWING 156 BOX 4.5 DRAWING WITH THE UPSIDE-DOWN
PART OF YOUR BRAIN 158 SILHOUETTES AND SHADOWS 159 WHERE ARE WE NOW? 162
FURTHER READING 163 OBJECTS 164 RICH VISUAL EXPERIENCES AND POOR VISUAL
REPORTS 166 CHANGE BLINDNESS IN THE LAB 168 THE ILLUSION OF DETAIL 169
BOX 5.1 A SIMPLE CARD TRICK 170 CONTENTS HOW MUCH CAN WE SEE AT A
GLANCE? 172 BRIDGING THE GAP: SHORT-TERM MEMORY 172 COUNTING SHEEP: HOW
MANY? 174 KEEPING TABS: TRACKING OBJECTS IN MOTION 176 THE MAGICAL
NUMBER ONE 176 WHAT IS A VISUAL OBJECT? 179 BOX 5.2 UNEVEN PERCEPTION OF
A SINGLE OBJECT 180 SPATIAL ATTENTION 181 FIGURE-GROUND ORGANIZATION 183
PARSING AT REGIONS OF DEEP CONCAVITY 184 PROBLEMS OF HIERARCHICAL
STRUCTURE AND SCALE 186 THE PROBLEM OF SHAPE: RECOVERING THE THIRD
DIMENSION 187 LIGHT SHINES FROM ABOVE 191 SURFACES ARE GENERALLY CONVEX
191 OBJECTS ARE ATTACHED TO SURFACES 193 OBJECTS ARE GENERALLY VIEWED
FROM ABOVE 193 A GENERIC VIEWPOINT 194 OBJECT RECOGNITION 197 THE
PROBLEM OF OBJECT CONSTANCY 198 RECOGNITION BY PARTS 199 RECOGNITION BY
VIEWS 202 SCENE PERCEPTION 206 GIST 207 BOX 5.3 HOW DETAILED IS YOUR
PICTURE MEMORY? 210 LAYOUT 211 VISION FOR IMAGES OR OBJECTS? 214 FURTHER
READING 215 TIME 216 TEMPORAL RESOLUTION AND THE SPEED OF SIGHT 217 BOX
6.1 CRITICAL FLICKER FUSION 220 SEEING TAKES TIME 221 NEURAL CHAOS IN A
STABLE WORLD 223 TEMPORAL BINDING IN THE BRAIN 224 BOX 6.2 SEEING
WHERE BEFORE SEEING WHAT 225 CONTENTS XI ILLUSIONS ARISING FROM
TEMPORAL CHAOS 228 TEMPORAL INTEGRATION 228 OBJECT FORMATION 233 WHAT
HAPPENED WHEN? 236 THE MAGICAL NUMBER ONE, AGAIN 240 VISUAL ATTENTION
OVER TIME 241 TWO MODES OF ATTENTION 242 ATTENTIONAL CAPTURE 244
TEMPORAL CORRELATION AND PERCEPTUAL CAUSALITY 247 THE TIMING OF VISUAL
EVENTS 250 TIME AFTER TIME 254 FURTHER READING 255 SPACE MAGNETIC HILLS
AND MYSTERY SPOTS 257 BOX 7.1 EXPLORING PROPRIOCEPTIVE BALANCE 261
KNOWING ONE S PLACE IN THE WORLD 263 ORIENTATION: WHAT S UP? 263
DIRECTION: WHERE IS IT? 270 BOX 7.2 EYEING A TARGET 271 HEADING: WHERE
AM I GOING? 272 BOX 7.3 ACTING LIKE CYCLOPS 273 CONSTRUCTING THE THIRD
DIMENSION 275 THE BENEFITS OF THE SECOND EYE 276 THE BENEFITS OF MOTION
281 USING ONLY ONE EYE 285 SEEING DISTANCE IN PICTURES 286 BOX 7.4 USING
A WINDOW TO STUDY DEPTH PERCEPTION 288 ART AND ILLUSION 297 BOX 7.5
WHAT S YOUR DRAWING STYLE? 300 WHY THE MOON CHANGES SIZE 300 BOX 7.6
SIZE CONSTANCY SCALING IN PICTURES 306 PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER 307
FURTHER READING 308 256 XII CONTENTS IMAGINATION 310 VISUAL IMAGERY 311
MENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS 312 UNAVOIDABLE MENTAL IMAGES 315 IMAGES IN THE
BRAIN 317 KEEPING OUR IMAGES STRAIGHT 321 BOX 8.1 LIMITATIONS OF MENTAL
IMAGES 322 VISUAL MEMORY 323 T VISUAL LEARNING 327 ; PRIMING 327 ^ MERE
EXPOSURE: EMOTIONAL REWARDS OF FAMILIARITY 328 ADAPTIVE LEARNING 330 HOW
DOES EXPERTISE CHANGE THE BRAIN? 334 I EVEN IMPRINTING IS FLEXIBLE! 340
* PROBLEM SOLVING BY VISUAL SIMULATION 347 I : LIMITS OF THE IMAGINATION
350 * FURTHER READING 351 : CONSCIOUSNESS 352 POINTING THE WAY 353 I BOX
9.1 THE UNCONSCIOUS EFFECTS OF SACCADIC SUPPRESSION 357 | WHAT S AT
STAKE IN THE SCIENCE OF VISUAL 1 CONSCIOUSNESS? 358 » VISION 358
AWARENESS 360 UNCONSCIOUS INFLUENCE 361 I I DISSOCIATING VISION FOR
PERCEPTION AND -; AWARENESS 364 * NEUROLOGICAL CONDITIONS 364 I ACTING
WITHOUT SEEING 369 J THE CONTENTS OF VISUAL CONSCIOUSNESS 384 1 REVERSE
HIERARCHY THEORY: SEEING FORESTS BEFORE TREES 385 1 MISSING THE
UNEXPECTED: INATTENTIONAL BLINDNESS 387 | AWARENESS IN SINGLE CELLS 391
| BOX 9.2 BINOCULAR RIVALRY 392 I UNUSUAL FORMS OF VISUAL CONSCIOUSNESS:
1 SYNESTHESIA 396 4 CONTENTS XIII PROBING THE CONSCIOUS MIND ON-LINE 399
LIVING IN THE ZONE 400 : VISUAL CONSCIOUSNESS AND VISION SCIENCE 401
FURTHER READING 402 GLOSSARY G1-G12 REFERENCES R1-R6 CREDITS CR1-CR2
AUTHOR INDEX AI1-AI4 SUBJECT INDEX SI1-SI20 COLOR APPENDIX A1-A20
|
adam_txt |
JAMES T. ENNS U N I V E R S I T Y O F B R I T I S H C O L U M B I A *THE
THINKING EYE THE SEEING BRAIN ^EXPLORATIONS IN VISUAL C O G N I T I O N
BRIEF CONTENTS PREFACE. XV 1 WHAT IS VISION SCIENCE? 2 2 EYE AND BRAIN
34 3 COLOR 78 4 EDGES 120 5 OBJECTS 164 6 TIME 216 7 SPACE 256 8
IMAGINATION 310 9 CONSCIOUSNESS 352 GLOSSARY G1-G12 REFERENCES R1-R6
CREDITS CR1-CR2 AUTHOR INDEX AI1-AI4 SUBJECT INDEX SH-SI20 COLOR
APPENDIX A1-A20 VI CONTENTS PREFACE XV WHAT IS VISION SCIENCE? SEEING
AND THINKING 3 WHAT VISION IS NOT 4 THE MYTH OF SEEING AS A FAITHFUL
RECORD 4 THE MYTH OF VISION AS A PASSIVE PROCESS 7 THE MYTH OF THE
SEEING EYE 10 THE MYTH OF IMAGELESS THOUGHT 12 WHAT IS VISION FOR? 13
BOX 1.1 "SUBJECTIVE" VERSUS "ARBITRARY" PERCEPTIONS 16 WHO ARE THE
VISION SCIENTISTS? 17 OPHTHALMOLOGISTS AND OPTOMETRISTS 18
NEUROSCIENTISTS, NEUROLOGISTS, AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGISTS 19 COGNITIVE
PSYCHOLOGISTS, PSYCHOPHYSICISTS, AND COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENTISTS 20
COMPUTER SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS 21 MEASUREMENT IN VISION SCIENCE 23
LIGHT 23 THE VISUAL STIMULUS 28 HUMAN BEHAVIOR 29 ARE YOU READY? 32
FURTHER READING 33 EYE AND BRAIN TOOLS OF THE TRADE, REVERSE ENGINEERS,
AND EMPTY BOXES 36 LESSONS OF THE MIGRAINE AURA 40 NEURAL ACTIVITY
CANNOT BE EXPERIENCED 42 SEEING DOES NOT REQUIRE THE EYES 43 VISUAL
MAPPING IN THE EYE AND BRAIN 44 BOX 2.1 SEEING YOUR OWN BLINDSPOT AND
FILLING IT IN 45 34 VII VIII CONTENTS UP AND DOWN THE CORTICAL HIERARCHY
51 THE ANATOMICAL HIERARCHY 51 THE TEMPORAL HIERARCHY 54 DYNAMIC
RECEPTIVE FIELDS 55 BOX 2.2 EXPERIENCING THE EFFECTS OF VISIBLE
PERSISTENCE 57 VISION WITHOUT SOME PARTS OF THE BRAIN 59 BLINDSIGHT 59
NEGLECT AND EXTINCTION 62 BALINT SYNDROME 67 CEREBRAL ACHROMATOPSIA 68
BOX 2.3 SEARCHING FOR FEATURE COMBINATIONS 69 MOTION BLINDNESS 71
CHARLES BONNET SYNDROME 73 IS IT ENOUGH? 74 FURTHER READING 75 COLOR 78
WHY DOES THE SKY LOOK BLUE? 79 COLOR CONSTANCY: SUPERFICIAL LIGHT AND
ENDURING SURFACES 81 BOX 3.1 COLOR CONSTANCY REVEALED WITH OVERHEAD
TRANSPARENCIES 85 WHAT DOES THE VISUAL SYSTEM DO WITH WAVELENGTH? 86
COLOR IN THE EYE 87 BOX 3.2 CREATING METAMERS USING A DESKTOP COMPUTER
90 COLOR IN THE BRAIN 94 THE HUMAN RESPONSE TO COLOR 98 HOW MANY COLORS
ARE THERE? 98 COLOR NAMES 98 COLOR SPACES 99 BOX 3.3 EXPLORING THE COLOR
GAMUT OF A DESKTOP COMPUTER 106 COLOR MIXING 107 COLOR STRANGERS AMONG
US 108 GETTING BY WITHOUT THE THIRD CONE: DICHROMATS 108 ADDING A FOURTH
CONE: TETRACHROMATIC SUPERWOMEN 110 LEARNING ABOUT COLOR THROUGH PLAY
113 ILLUSIONS OF COLOR CONTRAST AND AVERAGING 113 NEON COLOR ILLUSIONS
114 THE WATERCOLOR ILLUSION 115 CONTENTS IX DO WE KNOW THEM BY THEIR
COLOR? 116 WHAT IS COLOR FOR? 117 FURTHER READING 118 EDGES 120 THE
IMPOSSIBILITY OF READING BY MOONLIGHT 121 WHAT IS AN EDGE? 122 THE
LUMINANCE PROFILE 123 G SPATIAL FREQUENCY 125 BOX 4.1 SEEING YOUR OWN
CONTRAST SENSITIVITY FUNCTION 126 WHAT DOES THE VISUAL SYSTEM DO WITH
EDGES? 126 RODS AND CONES 127 BOX 4.2 VISON WITHOUT EDGES 129 GANGLION
CELLS 134 BOX 4.3 MEASURING THE USEFUL FIELD OF VIEW 135 LOWER BRAIN
STRUCTURES 138 VISUAL CORTEX 141 THE HUMAN RESPONSE TO EDGES 145
CONGENITAL ACHROMATOPSIA: CHRONIC READING BY MOONLIGHT 145 HERMANN GRID:
EDGE ENHANCEMENT AT WORK 148 CONNECTING THE DOTS: EDGE INTERACTIONS 150
SUBJECTIVE EDGES: SEEING EDGES THAT AREN'T THERE 150 EDGES INFLUENCE
BRIGHTNESS PERCEPTION 152 PERCEPTION BY EDGES ALONE 153 ARE LINE
DRAWINGS ENOUGH? 153 ART AND THE CARTOON ADVANTAGE 155 BOX 4.4 USING A
WINDOW TO CREATE A LINE DRAWING 156 BOX 4.5 DRAWING WITH THE UPSIDE-DOWN
PART OF YOUR BRAIN 158 SILHOUETTES AND SHADOWS 159 WHERE ARE WE NOW? 162
FURTHER READING 163 OBJECTS 164 RICH VISUAL EXPERIENCES AND POOR VISUAL
REPORTS 166 CHANGE BLINDNESS IN THE LAB 168 THE ILLUSION OF DETAIL 169
BOX 5.1 A SIMPLE CARD TRICK 170 CONTENTS HOW MUCH CAN WE SEE AT A
GLANCE? 172 BRIDGING THE GAP: SHORT-TERM MEMORY 172 COUNTING SHEEP: HOW
MANY? 174 KEEPING TABS: TRACKING OBJECTS IN MOTION 176 THE MAGICAL
NUMBER ONE 176 WHAT IS A VISUAL OBJECT? 179 BOX 5.2 UNEVEN PERCEPTION OF
A SINGLE OBJECT 180 SPATIAL ATTENTION 181 FIGURE-GROUND ORGANIZATION 183
PARSING AT REGIONS OF DEEP CONCAVITY 184 PROBLEMS OF HIERARCHICAL
STRUCTURE AND SCALE 186 THE PROBLEM OF SHAPE: RECOVERING THE THIRD
DIMENSION 187 LIGHT SHINES FROM ABOVE 191 SURFACES ARE GENERALLY CONVEX
191 OBJECTS ARE ATTACHED TO SURFACES 193 OBJECTS ARE GENERALLY VIEWED
FROM ABOVE 193 A GENERIC VIEWPOINT 194 OBJECT RECOGNITION 197 THE
PROBLEM OF OBJECT CONSTANCY 198 RECOGNITION BY PARTS 199 RECOGNITION BY
VIEWS 202 SCENE PERCEPTION 206 GIST 207 BOX 5.3 HOW DETAILED IS YOUR
PICTURE MEMORY? 210 LAYOUT 211 VISION FOR IMAGES OR OBJECTS? 214 FURTHER
READING 215 TIME 216 TEMPORAL RESOLUTION AND THE SPEED OF SIGHT 217 BOX
6.1 CRITICAL FLICKER FUSION 220 SEEING TAKES TIME 221 NEURAL CHAOS IN A
STABLE WORLD 223 TEMPORAL BINDING IN THE BRAIN 224 BOX 6.2 SEEING
"WHERE" BEFORE SEEING "WHAT" 225 CONTENTS XI ILLUSIONS ARISING FROM
TEMPORAL CHAOS 228 TEMPORAL INTEGRATION 228 OBJECT FORMATION 233 WHAT
HAPPENED WHEN? 236 THE MAGICAL NUMBER ONE, AGAIN 240 VISUAL ATTENTION
OVER TIME 241 TWO MODES OF ATTENTION 242 ATTENTIONAL CAPTURE 244
TEMPORAL CORRELATION AND PERCEPTUAL CAUSALITY 247 THE TIMING OF VISUAL
EVENTS 250 TIME AFTER TIME 254 FURTHER READING 255 SPACE MAGNETIC HILLS
AND MYSTERY SPOTS 257 BOX 7.1 EXPLORING PROPRIOCEPTIVE BALANCE 261
KNOWING ONE'S PLACE IN THE WORLD 263 ORIENTATION: WHAT'S UP? 263
DIRECTION: WHERE IS IT? 270 BOX 7.2 EYEING A TARGET 271 HEADING: WHERE
AM I GOING? 272 BOX 7.3 ACTING LIKE CYCLOPS 273 CONSTRUCTING THE THIRD
DIMENSION 275 THE BENEFITS OF THE SECOND EYE 276 THE BENEFITS OF MOTION
281 USING ONLY ONE EYE 285 SEEING DISTANCE IN PICTURES 286 BOX 7.4 USING
A WINDOW TO STUDY DEPTH PERCEPTION 288 ART AND ILLUSION 297 BOX 7.5
WHAT'S YOUR DRAWING STYLE? 300 WHY THE MOON CHANGES SIZE 300 BOX 7.6
SIZE CONSTANCY SCALING IN PICTURES 306 PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER 307
FURTHER READING 308 256 XII CONTENTS IMAGINATION 310 VISUAL IMAGERY 311
MENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS 312 UNAVOIDABLE MENTAL IMAGES 315 IMAGES IN THE
BRAIN 317 KEEPING OUR IMAGES STRAIGHT 321 BOX 8.1 LIMITATIONS OF MENTAL
IMAGES 322 VISUAL MEMORY 323 T VISUAL LEARNING 327 ; PRIMING 327 ^ MERE
EXPOSURE: EMOTIONAL REWARDS OF FAMILIARITY 328 ADAPTIVE LEARNING 330 HOW
DOES EXPERTISE CHANGE THE BRAIN? 334 I EVEN IMPRINTING IS FLEXIBLE! 340
* PROBLEM SOLVING BY VISUAL SIMULATION 347 I : LIMITS OF THE IMAGINATION
350 * FURTHER READING 351 : CONSCIOUSNESS 352 POINTING THE WAY 353 I BOX
9.1 THE UNCONSCIOUS EFFECTS OF SACCADIC SUPPRESSION 357 | WHAT'S AT
STAKE IN THE SCIENCE OF VISUAL 1 CONSCIOUSNESS? 358 » VISION 358
AWARENESS 360 UNCONSCIOUS INFLUENCE 361 I I DISSOCIATING VISION FOR
PERCEPTION AND -; AWARENESS 364 * NEUROLOGICAL CONDITIONS 364 I ACTING
WITHOUT SEEING 369 J THE CONTENTS OF VISUAL CONSCIOUSNESS 384 1 REVERSE
HIERARCHY THEORY: SEEING FORESTS BEFORE TREES 385 "1 MISSING THE
UNEXPECTED: INATTENTIONAL BLINDNESS 387 | AWARENESS IN SINGLE CELLS 391
| BOX 9.2 BINOCULAR RIVALRY 392 I UNUSUAL FORMS OF VISUAL CONSCIOUSNESS:
1 SYNESTHESIA 396 4 CONTENTS XIII PROBING THE CONSCIOUS MIND ON-LINE 399
LIVING IN THE ZONE 400 : VISUAL CONSCIOUSNESS AND VISION SCIENCE 401
FURTHER READING 402 GLOSSARY G1-G12 REFERENCES R1-R6 CREDITS CR1-CR2
AUTHOR INDEX AI1-AI4 SUBJECT INDEX SI1-SI20 COLOR APPENDIX A1-A20 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Enns, James T. |
author_facet | Enns, James T. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Enns, James T. |
author_variant | j t e jt jte |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV021575613 |
callnumber-first | B - Philosophy, Psychology, Religion |
callnumber-label | BF241 |
callnumber-raw | BF241 |
callnumber-search | BF241 |
callnumber-sort | BF 3241 |
callnumber-subject | BF - Psychology |
classification_rvk | CP 2500 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)53954274 (DE-599)BVBBV021575613 |
dewey-full | 152.14 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 152 - Perception, movement, emotions & drives |
dewey-raw | 152.14 |
dewey-search | 152.14 |
dewey-sort | 3152.14 |
dewey-tens | 150 - Psychology |
discipline | Psychologie |
discipline_str_mv | Psychologie |
edition | 1. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV021575613 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T14:39:56Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:39:01Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0393977218 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-014791359 |
oclc_num | 53954274 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
physical | Getr. Zählung Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2004 |
publishDateSearch | 2004 |
publishDateSort | 2004 |
publisher | Norton |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Enns, James T. Verfasser aut The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition James T. Enns 1. ed. New York, NY [u.a.] Norton 2004 Getr. Zählung Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cognitieve psychologie gtt Denken swd Kognitive Psychologie swd Percepção visual larpcal Sehen swd Visuele waarneming gtt Visuelle Wahrnehmung swd Visão larpcal Optical Illusions physiology Visual Perception physiology Visual perception HEBIS Datenaustausch Darmstadt application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014791359&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Enns, James T. The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition Cognitieve psychologie gtt Denken swd Kognitive Psychologie swd Percepção visual larpcal Sehen swd Visuele waarneming gtt Visuelle Wahrnehmung swd Visão larpcal Optical Illusions physiology Visual Perception physiology Visual perception |
title | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition |
title_auth | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition |
title_exact_search | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition |
title_exact_search_txtP | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition |
title_full | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition James T. Enns |
title_fullStr | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition James T. Enns |
title_full_unstemmed | The thinking eye, the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition James T. Enns |
title_short | The thinking eye, the seeing brain |
title_sort | the thinking eye the seeing brain explorations in visual cognition |
title_sub | explorations in visual cognition |
topic | Cognitieve psychologie gtt Denken swd Kognitive Psychologie swd Percepção visual larpcal Sehen swd Visuele waarneming gtt Visuelle Wahrnehmung swd Visão larpcal Optical Illusions physiology Visual Perception physiology Visual perception |
topic_facet | Cognitieve psychologie Denken Kognitive Psychologie Percepção visual Sehen Visuele waarneming Visuelle Wahrnehmung Visão Optical Illusions physiology Visual Perception physiology Visual perception |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014791359&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT ennsjamest thethinkingeyetheseeingbrainexplorationsinvisualcognition |