Simplicity in Vision: A Multidisciplinary Account of Perceptual Organization
Perceptual organization is the neuro-cognitive process that enables us to perceive scenes as structured wholes consisting of objects arranged in space. Simplicity in Vision explores the intriguing idea that these perceived wholes are given by the simplest organizations of the scenes. Peter A. van der Helm presents a truly multidisciplinary approach to answer fundamental questions such as: Are simplest organizations sufficiently reliable to guide our actions? What is the nature of the regularities that are exploited to arrive at simplest organizations? To account for the high combinatorial capacity and speed of the perceptual organization process, he proposes transparallel processing by hyperstrings. This special form of distributed processing not only gives classical computers the extraordinary computing power that seemed reserved for quantum computers, but also explains how neuronal synchronization relates to flexible self-organizing cognitive architecture in between the relatively rigid level of neurons and the still elusive level of consciousness.
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Simplicity in Vision: A Multidisciplinary Account of Perceptual Organization
Perceptual organization is the neuro-cognitive process that enables us to perceive scenes as structured wholes consisting of objects arranged in space. Simplicity in Vision explores the intriguing idea that these perceived wholes are given by the simplest organizations of the scenes. Peter A. van der Helm presents a truly multidisciplinary approach to answer fundamental questions such as: Are simplest organizations sufficiently reliable to guide our actions? What is the nature of the regularities that are exploited to arrive at simplest organizations? To account for the high combinatorial capacity and speed of the perceptual organization process, he proposes transparallel processing by hyperstrings. This special form of distributed processing not only gives classical computers the extraordinary computing power that seemed reserved for quantum computers, but also explains how neuronal synchronization relates to flexible self-organizing cognitive architecture in between the relatively rigid level of neurons and the still elusive level of consciousness.
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Simplicity in Vision: A Multidisciplinary Account of Perceptual Organization

Simplicity in Vision: A Multidisciplinary Account of Perceptual Organization

by Peter A. van der Helm
Simplicity in Vision: A Multidisciplinary Account of Perceptual Organization

Simplicity in Vision: A Multidisciplinary Account of Perceptual Organization

by Peter A. van der Helm

eBook

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Overview

Perceptual organization is the neuro-cognitive process that enables us to perceive scenes as structured wholes consisting of objects arranged in space. Simplicity in Vision explores the intriguing idea that these perceived wholes are given by the simplest organizations of the scenes. Peter A. van der Helm presents a truly multidisciplinary approach to answer fundamental questions such as: Are simplest organizations sufficiently reliable to guide our actions? What is the nature of the regularities that are exploited to arrive at simplest organizations? To account for the high combinatorial capacity and speed of the perceptual organization process, he proposes transparallel processing by hyperstrings. This special form of distributed processing not only gives classical computers the extraordinary computing power that seemed reserved for quantum computers, but also explains how neuronal synchronization relates to flexible self-organizing cognitive architecture in between the relatively rigid level of neurons and the still elusive level of consciousness.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781107720732
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 02/06/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Peter A. van der Helm is Visiting Professor at the Laboratory of Experimental Psychology at the University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Belgium.

Table of Contents

Prologue: levels of vision, description, and evaluation; Part I. The Theoretical Cycle: 1. Visual information processing; 2. Veridicality by simplicity; Part II. The Empirical Cycle: 3. Transparent holographic regularity; 4. Symmetry perception; Part III. The Tractability Cycle: 5. Transparallel processing; 6. Cognition by synchronization; Epilogue: towards a Gestalt of perceptual organization.
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