scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The Perception of the Visual World. By James J. Gibson. U.S.A.: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1950 (George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., London). Price 35s.

Ralph Hetherington
- 01 Oct 1952 - 
- Vol. 98, Iss: 413, pp 717-717
TLDR
In this paper, the authors offer a new book that enPDFd the perception of the visual world to read, which they call "Let's Read". But they do not discuss how to read it.
Abstract
Let's read! We will often find out this sentence everywhere. When still being a kid, mom used to order us to always read, so did the teacher. Some books are fully read in a week and we need the obligation to support reading. What about now? Do you still love reading? Is reading only for you who have obligation? Absolutely not! We here offer you a new book enPDFd the perception of the visual world to read.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Some informational aspects of visual perception.

Fred Attneave
- 01 May 1954 - 
TL;DR: Special types of lawfulness which may exist in space at a fixed time, and which seem particularly relevant to processes of visual perception are focused on.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Image quilting for texture synthesis and transfer

TL;DR: This work uses quilting as a fast and very simple texture synthesis algorithm which produces surprisingly good results for a wide range of textures and extends the algorithm to perform texture transfer — rendering an object with a texture taken from a different object.
Book

Texture analysis

TL;DR: The geometric, random field, fractal, and signal processing models of texture are presented and major classes of texture processing such as segmentation, classification, and shape from texture are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A theory of visual control of braking based on information about time-to-collision.

TL;DR: A mathematical analysis of the changing optic array at the driver's eye indicates that the simplest type of visual information, which would be sufficient for controlling braking and likely to be easily picked up by the driver, is information about time-to-collision, rather than information about distance, speed, or acceleration/deceleration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conscious and unconscious perception: Experiments on visual masking and word recognition ☆

TL;DR: It is proposed that central pattern masking has little effect on visual processing itself (while peripheral energy masking does), but affects availability of records of the results of those processes to consciousness, casting doubt on the paradigm assumption that representations yielded by perceptual analysis are identical to and directly reflected by phenomenal percepts.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Relations between the statistics of natural images and the response properties of cortical cells.

TL;DR: The results obtained with six natural images suggest that the orientation and the spatial-frequency tuning of mammalian simple cells are well suited for coding the information in such images if the goal of the code is to convert higher-order redundancy into first- order redundancy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some informational aspects of visual perception.

Fred Attneave
- 01 May 1954 - 
TL;DR: Special types of lawfulness which may exist in space at a fixed time, and which seem particularly relevant to processes of visual perception are focused on.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Image quilting for texture synthesis and transfer

TL;DR: This work uses quilting as a fast and very simple texture synthesis algorithm which produces surprisingly good results for a wide range of textures and extends the algorithm to perform texture transfer — rendering an object with a texture taken from a different object.
Book

Texture analysis

TL;DR: The geometric, random field, fractal, and signal processing models of texture are presented and major classes of texture processing such as segmentation, classification, and shape from texture are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A theory of visual control of braking based on information about time-to-collision.

TL;DR: A mathematical analysis of the changing optic array at the driver's eye indicates that the simplest type of visual information, which would be sufficient for controlling braking and likely to be easily picked up by the driver, is information about time-to-collision, rather than information about distance, speed, or acceleration/deceleration.