Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog
Note: Electronic data is machine generated. May be incomplete or contain other coding.
2. FOUNDATIONS OF CYCLOPEAN PERCEPTION 14 2. Human Visual Perception and the Cyclopean Mind" 14 2.2 Separation of Peripheral and Central Processes 15 2.3 To Classes of Cyclopean Stimulation 17 2.4 Monocular, Binocular, and Cyclopean Stimulation 20 2.5 Classical vet sus Cyclopean Perception: Three Outcomes 26 2.6 Outcome 1 C3clopean Phenomenon Identical to Classical Phenonmenon 31 2 7 Outcome 2: Only Classical Phenomenon Exists 33 2.8 Outcome 3 Only Cyclopean Phenomenon Exists 38 2.9 Some Limitations of Cyclopean Techniques 43 2. 0 An Example of Studying Brightness- ontrast with Cyclopean Techniques 45 2 11 Auditoor versus Visual Cyclopean Stimulation 50 3. CYCLOPEAN STIMULATION AND PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY 54 3. 1 Pereption as a Hierarchy of Pattern Matching 54 3.2 Perception versus Scrutiny 56 3.3 Hierarchy of Neural Feature Extraction in Visual Perception 58 3.4 Psychological Studies of Feature Extraction 66 3.5 Further Classes of Cyclopean Stimulation Based on Emmertý Law and Color Phenomena 74 3.6 Lo alization of Verner Acuity Perception 78 3.7 Localiation of Stroboscopic Movement Perception 82 3.8 Perception of Local and Global Levels 86 3.9 Monocular Local versus Binocular Global Information 87 3.10 Mfonocular Global versus Binocular Local Information 94 41 FIGURE AND GROUND 103 4. The First Quesionsof the "'Twenty Questions" Game 103 4.2 Perception of Moving Clusters 105 4.3 Perception of Connected Clusters under Rigid Transformations 110 4.4 Clusters in Visual Texture Discrimination 112 4.5 Perception of Clusters Having the Same Binocular Dispaiity 119 4.6 Perception into Figure and Ground 125 4 7 Perception of Symmetries 128 4.8 Perceptual Operators of Two Kinds 133 4.9 Perception and Selective Attention: Parallel versus Serial 136 4 10 Ambiguous Figure and Ground Reversal of Cyclopean Stimuli 140 5. BINOCULAR DEPTH PERCEPTION 142 5.1 Random-Dot Stereograms and Binocular Depth Perception 142 5.2 Some Anatomical, Physiologial and Psl ehological Facts about Binocular Depth Perception 143 5.3 Local versus Global Stereopsis 149 5.4 Textures in Visual Perception 153 5.5 Complex versus Simple Stereograms 157 5.6 Removal of Monocular Depth Cues 161 5.7 A New Paradigm: Stereopsis and Ambiguities 165 5.8 Hysteresis in Binocular Depth Perception 169 5.9 The Role of Convergence 176 5.10 D)ynamic Phenomena in Stereopsis 183 6. A HOLISTIC MODEL 186 6.1 Ambiguous Surfaces in Three-Dimensions 186 6.2 Ambiguously Perceivable Random-Dot Stereograms 187 6.3 Prception Time of Stereopsis 198 6.4 Ef fiet of Increased Disparity 202 6.5 A Model of Binocular Depth Perception 203 6.6 Extension of the Model to Perceptual Learning 215 6.7 Implications of the Model for the Neuropsychology of Binocular Fusion and Rivalry 218 7. CLASSICAL AND CYCLOPEANPHENOMENA 227 7 1 Cyclopean Phenomena Revisited 221 7.2 Localization of Optical Illusions 224 7.3 "Cyclopean Depth" Sensation 237 7.4 Localization of Eidetic Memory 239 7.5 Cyclopean Movement Detectors 246 7.6 Pu/frich Phenomenon without Ionocular Cues 252 7.7 Cyclopean Contours and Closure Phenomena 255 "7.8 Perception of Undetermined Areas 259 7.9 Cyclopean Aftereffects 261 8. MISCELLANEOUS USES OF CYCLOPEAN METHODS 270 8.1 Objective Tests for Stereopsis 270 8.2 Clinical Uses of Random-Dot Stereograms 276 8.3 Neurophysiological Probing during Cyclopean Stimulation 278 8.4 Toward the Automation of Binocular Depth Perception 280 8.5 Three-Dimensional Reconstruction from Two-Dimensional Brightness Distribution 283 8.6 f Ho to Set Up Cyclopean Research Facilities 285 9. INVARIANCE AND FORM RECOGNITION 289 "9.1 Problems of Semantics 289 9.2 Binocular and Monocular Perceptual Variances 290 9.3 Aleins Erlanger Program and Perception 292 9.4 Cooperative Phenomena and Perceptual Constancies 294 9.5 Toward a Psychophysics of Form 296 10. CYCLOPEAN PERCEPTION IN PERSPECTIVE 300 10. Other Psychoanatomical Techniques 300 102 Unsolved Problems of Cyclopean Research 307 10.3 The Role of Cyclopean Perception in Psychology 312