A systematic account of an approach to perception developed over the past 12 years, described in part in previous publications with Cantril, Kilpatrick, and Slack. The major characteristics of perception are conceived to be "transaction," "uniqueness," and "externalization." The central problem of perception is "to study the degree of correspondence between the significances which we externalize and those which we encounter and to understand the process by which this correspondence is achieved." Chapter titles are "Introduction"; "What Is Perception"; "The Perceptual Process"; "Visual Cues, Equivalent Configurations, the Invariance Hypothesis"; "Size, Shape, Perspective"; Movement Parallax, Overlay, Togetherness Cues"; "Binocular Stereopsis"; "Accommondation and Convergence"; "The Temporal Cource of Perception, Perceptual Conflicts"; and "The Perception of Persons As Visual Objects." (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
A systematic account of an approach to perception developed over the past 12 years, described in part in previous publications with Cantril, Kilpatrick, and Slack. The major characteristics of perception are conceived to be "transaction," "uniqueness," and "externalization." The central problem of perception is "to study the degree of correspondence between the significances which we externalize and those which we encounter and to understand the process by which this correspondence is achieved." Chapter titles are "Introduction"; "What Is Perception"; "The Perceptual Process"; "Visual Cues, Equivalent Configurations, the Invariance Hypothesis"; "Size, Shape, Perspective"; Movement Parallax, Overlay, Togetherness Cues"; "Binocular Stereopsis"; "Accommondation and Convergence"; "The Temporal Cource of Perception, Perceptual Conflicts"; and "The Perception of Persons As Visual Objects." (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
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