In the Mind's Eye: Julian Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures, Films, and the World
How can we best describe the processes by which we visually perceive our environment? Contemporary perceptual theory still lacks a coherent theoretical position that encompasses both the limitations on the information that can be retained from a single eye fixation and the abundant phenomenal and behavioral evidence for the perception of an extended and coherent world. As a result, many leading theorists and researchers in visual perception are turning with new or renewed interest to the work of Julian Hochberg. For over 50 years, in his own experimental research, in his detailed consideration of examples drawn from a wide range of visual experiences and activities, and most of all in his brilliant and sophisticated theoretical analyses, Hochberg has persistently engaged with the myriad problems inherent in working out the kind of coherent theoretical position the field currently lacks. The complexity of his thought and the wide range of areas into which Hochberg has pursued the solution to this central problem have, however, limited both the accessibility of his work and the appreciation of his accomplishment. In this volume we seek to bring the full range of Hochberg's work to the attention of a wider audience by offering a selection of his key works, many taken from out-of-print or relatively inaccessible sources. To facilitate the understanding of his accomplishment, and of what his work has to offer to contemporary researchers and theorists in visual perception, we include commentaries on salient aspects of his work by 20 noted researchers. In the Mind's Eye will be of interest to researchers working on topics such as perceptual organization, visual attention, space perception, motion perception, visual cognition, the relationship between perception and action, picture perception, and film, who are striving to obtain a deeper understanding of their own fields, and who want to integrate this understanding into a broader, unified view of visual perceptual processing.
1112234054
In the Mind's Eye: Julian Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures, Films, and the World
How can we best describe the processes by which we visually perceive our environment? Contemporary perceptual theory still lacks a coherent theoretical position that encompasses both the limitations on the information that can be retained from a single eye fixation and the abundant phenomenal and behavioral evidence for the perception of an extended and coherent world. As a result, many leading theorists and researchers in visual perception are turning with new or renewed interest to the work of Julian Hochberg. For over 50 years, in his own experimental research, in his detailed consideration of examples drawn from a wide range of visual experiences and activities, and most of all in his brilliant and sophisticated theoretical analyses, Hochberg has persistently engaged with the myriad problems inherent in working out the kind of coherent theoretical position the field currently lacks. The complexity of his thought and the wide range of areas into which Hochberg has pursued the solution to this central problem have, however, limited both the accessibility of his work and the appreciation of his accomplishment. In this volume we seek to bring the full range of Hochberg's work to the attention of a wider audience by offering a selection of his key works, many taken from out-of-print or relatively inaccessible sources. To facilitate the understanding of his accomplishment, and of what his work has to offer to contemporary researchers and theorists in visual perception, we include commentaries on salient aspects of his work by 20 noted researchers. In the Mind's Eye will be of interest to researchers working on topics such as perceptual organization, visual attention, space perception, motion perception, visual cognition, the relationship between perception and action, picture perception, and film, who are striving to obtain a deeper understanding of their own fields, and who want to integrate this understanding into a broader, unified view of visual perceptual processing.
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In the Mind's Eye: Julian Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures, Films, and the World

In the Mind's Eye: Julian Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures, Films, and the World

In the Mind's Eye: Julian Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures, Films, and the World

In the Mind's Eye: Julian Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures, Films, and the World

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Overview

How can we best describe the processes by which we visually perceive our environment? Contemporary perceptual theory still lacks a coherent theoretical position that encompasses both the limitations on the information that can be retained from a single eye fixation and the abundant phenomenal and behavioral evidence for the perception of an extended and coherent world. As a result, many leading theorists and researchers in visual perception are turning with new or renewed interest to the work of Julian Hochberg. For over 50 years, in his own experimental research, in his detailed consideration of examples drawn from a wide range of visual experiences and activities, and most of all in his brilliant and sophisticated theoretical analyses, Hochberg has persistently engaged with the myriad problems inherent in working out the kind of coherent theoretical position the field currently lacks. The complexity of his thought and the wide range of areas into which Hochberg has pursued the solution to this central problem have, however, limited both the accessibility of his work and the appreciation of his accomplishment. In this volume we seek to bring the full range of Hochberg's work to the attention of a wider audience by offering a selection of his key works, many taken from out-of-print or relatively inaccessible sources. To facilitate the understanding of his accomplishment, and of what his work has to offer to contemporary researchers and theorists in visual perception, we include commentaries on salient aspects of his work by 20 noted researchers. In the Mind's Eye will be of interest to researchers working on topics such as perceptual organization, visual attention, space perception, motion perception, visual cognition, the relationship between perception and action, picture perception, and film, who are striving to obtain a deeper understanding of their own fields, and who want to integrate this understanding into a broader, unified view of visual perceptual processing.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190292072
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 01/04/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 11 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

University of Arizona

University of New South Wales

SUNY College of Optometry

Table of Contents


Credits     ix
Contributors     xiii
Introduction     xv
Selected Papers of Julian Hochberg
Familiar Size and the Perception of Depth   Carol Barnes Hochherg     3
A Quantitative Approach to Figural "Goodness"   Edward McAlister     11
Apparent Spatial Arrangement and Perceived Brightness   Jacob Beck     17
Perception: Toward the Recovery of a Definition     23
The Psychophysics of Pictorial Perception     30
Pictorial Recognition as an Unlearned Ability: A Study of One Child's Performance   Virginia Brooks     60
Recognition of Faces: I. An Exploratory Study   Ruth Ellen Galper     66
In the Mind's Eye     70
Attention, Organization, and Consciousness     100
Components of Literacy: Speculations and Exploratory Research     125
Reading as an Intentional Behavior   Virginia Brooks     139
The Representation of Things and People     148
Higher-Order Stimuli and Inter-Response Coupling in the Perception of the Visual World     186
Film Cutting and Visual Momentum   Virginia Brooks     206
Pictorial Functions and Perceptual Structures     229
Levels of Perceptual Organization     275
How Big Is a Stimulus?     302
Form Perception: Experience and Explanations     329
The Perception of Pictorial Representations     360
Movies in the Mind's Eye   Virginia Brooks     376
Looking Ahead (One Glance at a Time)     396
Commentaries on Julian Hochberg's Work
Overviews
The Piecemeal, Constructive, and Schematic Nature of Perception   Mary A. Peterson     419
Hochberg: A Perceptual Psychologist   Barbara Gillam     429
Schematic Maps and Integration Across Glances
Mental Schemata and the Limits of Perception   James T. Enns   Erin Austen     439
Integration of Visual Information Across Saccades   Mary M. Hayhoe     448
Scene Perception: The World Through a Window   Helene Intraub     454
"How Big Is a Stimulus?": Learning About Imagery by Studying Perception   Daniel Reisberg     467
How Big Is an Optical Invariant?: Limits of Tau in Time-to-Contact Judgments   Patricia R. DeLucia     473
Hochberg and Inattentional Blindness   Arien Mack     483
Local Processing, Organization, and Perceptual Rules
Framing the Rules of Perception: Hochberg Versus Galileo, Gestalts, Garner, and Gibson   James E. Cutting      495
On the Internal Consistency of Perceptual Organization   James T. Todd     504
Piecemeal Perception and Hochberg's Window: Grouping of Stimulus Elements Over Distances   James R. Pomerantz     509
The Resurrection of Simplicity in Vision   Peter A. van der Helm     518
Shape Constancy and Perceptual Simplicity: Hochberg's Fundamental Contributions   Zygmunt Pizlo     525
Constructing and Interpreting the World in the Cerebral Hemispheres   Paul M. Corballis     534
Segmentation, Grouping, and Shape: Some Hochbergian Questions   Philip J. Kellman   Patrick Garrigan     542
Pictures, Film, and Dance
Ideas of Lasting Influence: Hochberg's Anticipation of Research on Change Blindness and Motion-Picture Perception   Daniel J. Simons   Daniel T. Levin     557
On the Cognitive Ecology of the Cinema   Ed S. Tan     562
Hochberg on the Perception of Pictures and of the World   H. A. Sedgwick     572
Celebrating the Usefulness of Pictorial Information in Visual Perception   Jeremy Beer     581
Mental Structure in Experts' Perception of Human Movement   Dale S. Klopfer     592
Julian Hochberg: Biography and Bibliography
Biography     601
Bibliography      602
Name Index     609
Subject Index     620
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