

An edition of Early vision and beyond (1995)
By Thomas V. Papathomas
Publish Date
1995
Publisher
MIT Press
Language
eng
Pages
272
Description:
Using as its springboard Bela Julesz's many seminal contributions in vision. Early Vision presents in one convenient volume strategic problems in binocular vision, visual texture, motion perception, and visual attention. Each is examined from the point of view of at least three major disciplines - psychophysics, computational vision, and neurophysiology. As we gain deeper insights into the workings of the mind, and as technological advances allow bolder experiments, a multidisciplinary approach to the problem of vision is essential. These contributions present progress across disciplines in research on vision processes at the sensory level that are devoid of higher-order cognitive processes and semantics. Although divided into the four major sections mentioned above, chapters and sections are bound by common threads: several chapters report on psychoanatomical techniques, other chapters examine the role of color in diverse areas of early visual processing, while still others share the theme of perceptual learning, a relatively new area of research in early vision.
subjects: Visual perception, Physiological Psychology, PSYCHOLOGY, Vision, Perception, Ocular Physiological Phenomena, Sensation, Light Signal Transduction, Signal Transduction, Mental Processes, Nervous System Physiological Phenomena, Psychophysiology, Biochemical Phenomena, Phenomena and Processes, Psychological Phenomena and Processes, Cell Physiological Phenomena, Psychiatry and Psychology, Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena, Chemical Phenomena, Ocular Vision, Human Anatomy & Physiology, Health & Biological Sciences, Neuroscience