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Laws of Seeing

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Metzger, Wolfgang (Westfälische Wilhelms Universität, Münster)
  Translator Spillmann, Lothar (University of Freiburg)
  Translator Lehar, Stephen (Schepens Eye Research Institute, Boston)
  Translator West, M
  Translator Wertheimer, Michael (University of Colorado Boulder)
PUBLISHER:
  MIT Press  (Cambrige)
SERIES TITLE:
 
YEAR: 2006
PUB TYPE: Book (ISBN 0-262-13467-5)
VOLUME/EDITION: 1 edition
PAGES (INTRO/BODY): 392 p.
SUBJECT(S): perception research, Gestalt psychology, Gestalt theory, experimental psychology
DISCIPLINE: Psychology
LC NUMBER: None
HTTP: http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11064
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-427-279 (Last edited on 2007/03/18 14:07:16 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
This classic work in vision science, written by a leading figure in Germany's Gestalt movement in psychology and first published in 1936, addresses topics that remain of major interest to vision researchers today. Wolfgang Metzger's main argument, drawn from Gestalt theory, is that the objects we perceive in visual experience are not the objects themselves but perceptual effigies of those objects constructed by our brain according to natural rules. Gestalt concepts are currently being increasingly integrated into mainstream neuroscience by researchers proposing network processing beyond the classical receptive field. Metzger's discussion of such topics as ambiguous figures, hidden forms, camouflage, shadows and depth, and three-dimensional representations in paintings will interest anyone working in the field of vision and perception, including psychologists, biologists, neurophysiologists, and researchers in computational vision--and artists, designers, and philosophers.

Each chapter is accompanied by compelling visual demonstrations of the phenomena described; the book includes 194 illustrations, drawn from visual science, art, and everyday experience, that invite readers to verify Metzger's observations for themselves.
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