J
J. Farley Norman
Researcher at Western Kentucky University
Publications - 110
Citations - 3787
J. Farley Norman is an academic researcher from Western Kentucky University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Binocular disparity & Visual perception. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 106 publications receiving 3562 citations. Previous affiliations of J. Farley Norman include Ohio State University & DePauw University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The visual perception of exocentric distance in outdoor settings
J. Farley Norman,Olivia C. Adkins,Lauren E. Pedersen,Cecia M. Reyes,Rachel A. Wulff,Alex Tungate +5 more
TL;DR: While older adults perform similarly outdoors and indoors, the accuracy of younger adults' exocentric judgements improves substantially in outdoor settings (so that the accuracy becomes similar to that exhibited by older adults).
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Does monocular visual space contain planes
Jan J. Koenderink,Jan J. Koenderink,Liliana Albertazzi,Andrea J. van Doorn,Raymond van Ee,Wim A. van de Grind,Astrid M. L. Kappers,Joseph S. Lappin,J. Farley Norman,Augustinus H. J. Oomes,Susan P. te Pas,Flip Phillips,Sylvia C. Pont,Whitman Richards,James T. Todd,Frans A. J. Verstraten,Sjoerd C. de Vries +16 more
TL;DR: Here it is reported on a direct empirical test of the existence of planes in monocular visual space for a group of sixteen experienced observers, finding that the generic population might well be inhomogeneous with respect to the structure of visual space.
Journal ArticleDOI
Aging and the cross modal perception of natural object shape
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Modulatory effects of binocular disparity and aging upon the perception of speed.
TL;DR: Modulatory effects of a surround upon the perceived speed of a moving central region are investigated, showing that the perceived speeds of older adults are different: older observers generally perceive nearer targets as faster both when center and surround move in the same direction and when they move in opposite directions.
Journal ArticleDOI
The perception of 3-D shape from shadows cast onto curved surfaces.
J. Farley Norman,Young-Lim Lee,Flip Phillips,Hideko F. Norman,L. RaShae Jennings,T. Ryan McBride +5 more
TL;DR: The results showed that the discrimination of 3-D object shape from cast shadows was generally invariant over the distortions produced by hemispherical background surfaces, and observers often had difficulty in identifying the shadows cast onto saddle-shaped background surfaces.