Acts of perceptual inquiry: problems for any stimulus-based simplicity theory |
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Authors: | Hochberg Julian |
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Affiliation: | Columbia University, 170 West End Avenue, Apt 8E, New York, NY 10023, USA. vfilmb@aol.com |
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Abstract: | Stimulus-specified simplicity is simply insufficient to predict the appearance of objects' 3D forms and figural shapes, etc., as originally intended. Which information a viewer chooses to attend can determine both what 3D structure is perceived and its attendant perceptual consequences; moreover, a shape's meaningfulness or denotivity [M.A. Peterson, Current Directions in Psychological Science 3 (1994) 105] can overcome simplicity-based figure-ground segregation. In both cases, perceptual consequences, such as subsequent perceived movements, are constrained or primed in ways that can help us corroborate and define what the viewer has perceived; that may help us in studying the underlying events in brain processing; and that should help in designing such perceptual applications as still and animated displays. Demonstrations, theoretical framework, and potential research tools are offered. |
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Keywords: | 2323 2346 4010 |
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