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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Visual Thought

The depictive space of perception

Edited by Liliana Albertazzi
Trento University

2006. xii, 380 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5203 6 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9301 5 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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This volume starts from an interdisciplinary expertise of the contributors, and chooses to work on the very origins of conscious qualitative states in perception. The leading research paradigm can be synthesized in ‘phenomenology to neurons to stimuli, and backwards’, since as a starting point it is taken the phenomenal appearances in the visual field. Specifically, the leading theme of the volume is the co-presence and interaction of diverse types of spaces in vision, like the optical space of psychophysics and of neural elaboration, the qualitative space of phenomenal appearances, and its relation with the pictorial space of art. The contributors to the volume agree in arguing that those spaces follow different rules of organization, whose specific singularity and reciprocal dependence have to be individuated, as a preliminary step to understand the architecture of the conscious awareness of our environment and to conceive its potential implementation in constructing any kind of embodied intentional agents. (Series B)


Table of contents

Affiliations, addresses
ix–x
Foreword
xi–xii
Perception of visual spaces
1
Introduction to visual spaces
Liliana Albertazzi
1–33
Coplanar reflectance change and the ontology of surface perception
Dhanraj Vishwanath
35–70
Evidence suggestive of separate visual dynamics in perception and in memory
Timothy L. Hubbard and Jon R. Courtney
71–97
Illusory space and paradoxical transparency in stereokinetic objects
Mario Zanforlin
99–104
The neural space of visual shape perception
Ed Connor
105–114
Boundary Gestalt limits flow Gestalt: The geometry of good continuation
Steven W. Zucker and Ohad Ben-Shahar
115–131
Depiction of visual spaces
133
Pictorial space, a modern reappraisal of Adolf Hildebrand
Jan J. Koenderink and Andrea J. van Doorn
135–153
Gestalts of thought
Barbara Tversky
155–163
Visual quality: Drawing on canvas
Liliana Albertazzi
165–193
Rudolf Arnheim’s graphic equivalents in children’s drawings and drawings and paintings by Paul Klee
John Willats
195–219
Visual perception and theories of painting: An uneasy complementarity
Alf C. Zimmer
221–232
Bridging perception and depiction of visual spaces
233
Dynamics of picture viewing and picture description
Jana Holšánová
235–256
Order and complexity in naturalistic landscapes: On creation, depiction and perception of Japanese dry rock gardens
Gert J. van Tonder
257–301
Thoughts on shape
Frederic Fol Leymarie
303–350
Tracing axes of growth
Athanassios Economou
351–365

John Willats†

Jan J. Koenderink
367–372
Name index
373–375
Subject index
377–380