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011 _aBIB MATCHES WORLDCAT
020 _a0195172884
_qalk. paper
020 _a9780195172881
_qalk. paper
035 _a(OCoLC)56103902
040 _aDLC
_beng
_erda
_dATU
082 0 0 _a152.14
_222
245 0 0 _aSeeing spatial form /
_cedited by Michael R.M. Jenkin, Laurence R. Harris.
264 1 _aOxford ;
_aNew York :
_bOxford University Press,
_c2006.
300 _axx, 439 pages, 4 unnumbered pages of plates :
_billustrations (some colour) ;
_c25 cm +
_e1 computer disc (12 cm)
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
336 _acomputer dataset
_bcod
_2rdacontent
_3Accompanying material
337 _aunmediated
_bn
_2rdamedia
337 _acomputer
_bc
_2rdamedia
_3Accompanying material
338 _avolume
_bnc
_2rdacarrier
338 _acomputer disc
_bcd
_2rdacarrier
_3Accompanying material
500 _a"This book is in appreciation of the contributions of David Martin Regan"--Pref.
500 _aAccompanied by: 1 computer disc (CD-ROM)
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
504 _a"Selected publications of David Regan": p. 405-419.
505 0 0 _g1
_tSeeing spatial form /
_rLaurence R. Harris and Michael Jenkin --
_g2
_tPictorial relief /
_rJan J. Koenderink, Andrea J. van Doorn, and Astrid M.L. Kappers --
_g3
_tGeometry and spatial vision /
_rGerald Westheimer --
_g4
_tThe inputs to global form detection /
_rDavid R. Badcock and Colin W.G. Clifford --
_g5
_tProbability multiplication as a new principle in psychophysics /
_rMichael Morgan, Charles Chubb, and Joshua Solomon --
_g6
_tSpatial form as inherently three dimensional /
_rChristopher W. Tyler --
_g7
_tWhite's effect in lightness, color, and motion /
_rStuart Anstis --
_g8
_tThe processing of motion-defined form /
_rDeborah Giaschi --
_g9
_tVision in flying, driving, and sport /
_rRob Gray --
_g10
_tForm-from-watercolor in surface perception, and old maps /
_rLothar Spillmann, Baingio Pinna, and John S. Werner --
_g11
_tThe basis of saccadic decision: what we can learn from visual search and visual attention /
_rEileen Kowler --
_g12
_tHandling real forms in real life /
_rR.M. Steinman, W. Menezes, and A.N. Herst --
_g13
_tThe processing of spatial form by the human brain studies by recording the brain's electrical and magnetic responses to visual stimuli /
_rDavid Regan and Marian P. Regan --
_g14
_tLinking psychophysics and physiology of center-surround interactions in visual motion processing /
_rDuje Tadin and Joseph S. Lappin --
_g15
_tTransparent motion: a powerful tool to study segmentation, integration, adaptation, and attentional selection /
_rThomas Papathomas, Zoltan Vidnyászky, and Eric Blaser --
_g16
_tNeurological correlates of damage to the magnocellular and parvocellular visual pathways: motion, form, and form from motion after cerebral lesions /
_rJames A. Sharpe, Ji Soo Kim, and Josée Rivest --
_g17
_tThe effect of diverse dopamine receptors on spatial processing in the central retina: a model /
_rIvan Bodis-Wollner and Areti Tzelepi --
_g18
_tImproving abnormal spatial vision in adults with amblyopia /
_rUri Polat --
_g19
_tVisual development with one eye /
_rMarin J. Steinbach and Esther G. González --
_gA
_tSelected publications of David Regan.
520 _a"The world is divided into objects: things that are distinct from their backgrounds and that can move or be moved. Objects are food and prey and threats, as well as neutral items, and it is critical to be able to see them. How the form of an object is distinguished is one of the most basic,yet least understood, topics of research in vision perception. The object-defining system needs to operate in the real world, where objects and viewers move, and where the scene is cluttered, rarely offering a clear, unobscured view of any object. How are we able to see and define objects usingthe complex pattern of light falling on the retina? An object becomes visible if it differs sufficiently from its surroundings in its luminance, color, texture, motion, or depth. Although the processes that use these different cues are quite distinct, research has shown that they share someorganizational principles. This book, Seeing Spatial Form, is dedicated to David Martin Regan who has made so many contributions to our understanding of how we see objects. Its chapters being together iseas from some of the world's leading researchers in form vision to explain what we know aboutdistinguishing form. The book includes a CD-ROM, which contains additional demonstrations and color images that considerably enhance the chapter contents. Seeing Spatial Form will be an invaluable resource for student and professional researchers in vision science, cognitive psychology, andneuroscience."--Publisher description.
588 _aMachine converted from AACR2 source record.
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700 1 _aRegan, D.
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700 1 _aJenkin, Michael,
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700 1 _aHarris, Laurence,
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