TY - BOOK AU - Hochberg,Julian E. AU - Peterson,Mary A. AU - Gillam,Barbara AU - Sedgwick,H.A. ED - ProQuest (Firm) TI - In the mind's eye: Julian Hochberg on the perception of pictures, films, and the world AV - BF241 .H55 2007 U1 - 152.14 22 PY - 2007/// CY - Oxford, New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Visual perception KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and indexes; 1; Familiar size and the perception of depth --; 2; A quantitative approach to figural "goodness" --; 3; Apparent spatial arrangement and perceived brightness --; 4; Perception: toward the recovery of a definition --; 5; The psychophysics of pictorial perception --; 6; Pictorial recognition as an unlearned ability: a study of one child's performance --; 7; Recognition of faces --; 8; In the mind's eye --; 9; Attention, organization, and consciousness --; 10; Components of literacy --; 11; Reading as an intentional behavior --; 12; The representation of things and people --; 13; Higher-order stimuli and inter-response coupling in the perception of the visual world --; 14; Film cutting and visual momentum --; 15; Pictorial functions and perceptual structures --; 16; Levels of perceptual organization --; 17; How big is a stimulus --; 18; From perception: experience and explanations --; 19; The perception of pictorial representations --; 20; Movies in the mind's eye --; 21; Looking ahead (one glance at a time) --; 22; The piecemeal, constructive, and schematic nature of perception --; 23; Hochberg: a perceptual psychologist --; 24; Mental schemata and the limits of perception --; 25; Integration of visual information across saccades --; 26; Scene perception: the world through a window --; 27; "How big is a stimulus?": learning about imagery by studying perception --; 28; How big is an optical invariant?: limits of tau in time-to-contact judgments --; 29; Hochberg and inattentional blindness --; 30; Framing the rules of perception: Hochberg versus Galileo, Gestalts, Garner, and Gibson --; 31; On the internal consistency of perceptual organization --; 32; Piecemeal perception and Hochberg's window: grouping of stimulus elements over distances --; 33; The resurrection of simplicity in vision --; 34; Shape constancy and perceptual simplicity: Hochberg's fundamental contributions --; 35; Constructing and interpreting the world in the cerebral hemispheres --; 36; Segmentation, grouping, and shape: some Hochbergian questions --; 37; Ideas of lasting influence: Hochberg's anticipation of research on change blindness and motion-picture perception --; 38; On the cognitive ecology of the cinema --; 39; Hochberg on the perception of pictures and of the world --; 40; Celebrating the usefulness of pictorial information in visual perception --; 41; Mental structure in experts' perception on human movement --; Julian Hochberg: biography and bibliography; Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bacm-ebooks/detail.action?docID=415431 ER -