Seeing happens effortlessly and yet is endlessly complex. One of the most fascinating aspects of visual perception is its stability and constancy. As we shift our gaze or move about the world, the light projected onto the retinas is constantly changing. Yet the surrounding objects appear stable in their properties. Psychologists have long been interested in constancies, exploring questions such as:: How good is constancy? Is constancy a fact about how things look, or is it a product of our beliefs and judgments about how things look? How can the contents of visual experience be studied experimentally? However, philosophers have long been interested in characterizing visual experience and have become widely interested in the constancies more recently. As psychologists and philosophers have interacted, newquestions have arisen:: should we regard any departure from constancy as a failure of the visual system, or might it be a reasonable or adaptive response? In what circumstances is seeing highly conditioned by cognitive factors such as background assumptions, and in what circumstances not? Visual Experience explores size constancy and color constancy. It considers methodologies for studying conscious visual perception, efforts to describe visual experience in relation to constancy, what it means that constancy is not always perfect, and the conceptual resources needed for explaining visual experience. This interdisciplinary book is invaluable for both vision scientists and philosophers of mind.
Introduction: Visual Experience; Cognitive and Phenomenal Factors in Spatial Perception; Judging the Size of a Distant Object: Strategy Use by Children and Adults; Phenomenal and Cognitive Factors in Spatial Perception; Sensory and Cognitive Explanations for a Century of Size Constancy Research; Constant Enough: On the Kinds of Perceptual Constancy Worth Having; Historical and Conceptual Issues; Objective and Subjective Sides of Perception; A Mechanistic Perspective on the Given; Spatial Organization and the Appearances Thereof in Early Vision; Computation and the Ambiguity of Perception; Color Constancy: Memory, Computation, and Inference; High-Level Perceptual Influences on Color Appearance; Constancy, Content, and Inference; Approaching Color with Bayesian Algorithms; Epilogue: Advances and Open Questions;
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