Results for 'Visual Field*'

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  1.  6
    Cultivating perception through artworks: phenomenological enactments of ethics, politics, and culture.Helen A. Fielding - 2021 - Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
    What are the ethical, political and cultural consequences of forgetting how to trust our senses? How can artworks help us see, sense, think, and interact in ways that are outside of the systems of convention and order that frame so much of our lives? In Cultivating Perception through Artworks, Helen Fielding challenges us to think alongside and according to artworks, cultivating a perception of what is really there and being expressed by them. Drawing from and expanding on the work of (...)
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  2.  36
    Dissociating the effects of attention and contingency awareness on evaluative conditioning effects in the visual paradigm.Andy P. Field & Annette C. Moore - 2005 - Cognition and Emotion 19 (2):217-243.
    Two experiments are described that investigate the effects of attention in moderating evaluative conditioning (EC) effects in a picture‐picture paradigm in which previously discovered experimental artifacts (e.g., Field & Davey, 1999 Field, AP, and Davey, GCL, (1999). Reevaluating evaluative conditioning: A nonassociative explanation of conditioning effects in the visual evaluative conditioning paradigm, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Behavior Processes 25 ((1999)), pp. 211–224.[Crossref], [PubMed], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]) were overcome by counterbalancing conditioned stimuli (CSs) and unconditioned stimuli (...)
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  3. Filming Dance: Embodied Syntax in Sasha Waltz' S.Helen A. Fielding - 2015 - Paragraph 38 (1):69-85.
    This paper brings Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological approach to Sasha Waltz’s dance film S, which focuses on the relation between sexuality and language. Maintaining that movement in cinema takes place in the viewers and not the film, the paper considers how the visual can be deepened to include the ways we move and are moved. Saussure’s insights into language are brought to the sensible, which is here understood in terms of divergences from norms. Though film would seem to privilege vision, viewing (...)
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  4.  5
    Mapping the International Underground: Jeff Nuttall and Global Counterculture.Douglas Field - 2017 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 93 (1):1-21.
    Despite publishing nearly forty books between 1963 and 2003, Jeff Nuttall remains a minor figure in the history of the International Underground of the long 1960s. Drawing on his uncatalogued papers at the John Rylands Library, this article seeks to recoup Nuttall as one of the key architects of the International Underground. In so doing, my article argues that Nuttalls contributions to global counterculture challenge the critical consensus that British avant-garde writers were merely imitators of their US counterparts. By exploring (...)
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  5.  37
    Colours and Sounds: The Field of Visual and Auditory Consciousness.Junichi Murata - 2012 - In Dan Zahavi (ed.), The Oxford handbook of contemporary phenomenology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter, which describes the spatiality of conscious phenomena, such as colours and sounds, addresses James Gibson’s ecological approach to confirm and develop further the Husserlian phenomenological view of colours and sounds. The ecological approach to perception could be regarded as an attempt to undertake empirical research corresponding to the phenomenological insight of perception. In this context, in addition to the Husserlian concept of “adumbration” and the Gibsonian concept of “ecological optics,” the differentiation of various modes of colour appearances, which (...)
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  6.  9
    Visual alterity: seeing difference in cinema.Randall Halle - 2021 - Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
    Using cinema to explore the visual aspects of alterity, Randall Halle analyzes how we become cognizant of each other and how we perceive and judge another person in a visual field. Halle draws on insights from philosophy and recent developments in cognitive and neuroscience to argue that there is no pure "natural" sight. We always see in a particular way, from a particular vantage point, and through a specific apparatus, and Halle shows how human beings have used cinema (...)
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  7.  3
    Visual culture and the forensic: culture, memory, ethics.David Houston Jones - 2022 - New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.
    David Houston Jones builds a bridge between practices conventionally understood as forensic, such as crime scene investigation, and the broader field of activity which the forensic now designates, for example performance and installation art, as well as photography. Contemporary work in these areas responds both to forensic evidence, including crime scene photography, and to some of the assumptions underpinning its consumption. It asks how we look, and in whose name, foregrounding and scrutinising the enduring presence of voyeurism in visual (...)
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  8.  7
    Transfer of adaptation to rotation of the visual field.Curtis W. McIntyre & Herbert L. Pick - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (4):782.
  9.  14
    On Orenstein’s and Meighan’s finding of left visual field recognition superiority for bilaterally presented words.Walter F. Mckeever - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 8 (2):85-86.
  10.  25
    How can striate vision contribute to the detection of objects within a homonymous visual field defect?Otmar Meienberg - 1983 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (3):455.
  11.  4
    Time, language, and visuality in Agamben's philosophy.Jenny Doussan - 2013 - New York, New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Giorgio Agamben, a philosopher both celebrated and reviled, is among the prominent voices in contemporary Italian thought today. His work, which touches upon fields as diverse as aesthetics and biopolitics, is often understood within a framework of Aristotelian potentiality. With this incisive critique, Doussan identifies a different tendency in the philosopher's work, an engagement with the problem of time that is inextricably bound up with language and visuality. Founded in his early writings on metaphysics and continuing to his present occupation (...)
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  12.  33
    The visual field and the visual world: a reply to Professor Boring.James J. Gibson - 1952 - Psychological Review 59 (2):149-151.
  13.  27
    Visual field and the letter span.Herbert F. Crovitz & H. Richard Schiffman - 1965 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 70 (2):218.
  14.  44
    The Visual Field in Russell and Wittgenstein.Michael O'Sullivan - 2015 - Philosophical Investigations 38 (4):316-332.
    Bertrand Russell developed a conception of the nature of the visual field, and of other sensory fields, as part of his project of explaining the construction of the external world. Wittgenstein's remarks on the visual field in the Tractatus are in part a response to Russell. Wittgenstein, against Russell, analyses the visual field in terms of facts rather than objects. Further, his conception of the field is, in a distinctive sense, depsychologised.
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  15.  29
    Visual field position and word-recognition threshold.Willis Overton & Morton Wiener - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (2):249.
  16.  21
    Visual field articulation in the absence of spatial stimulus gradients.Carl R. Brown & J. W. Gebhard - 1948 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 38 (2):188.
  17. Truth and the visual field.Barry Smith - 1999 - In Jean Petitot, Francisco J. Varela, Bernard Pachoud & Jean-Michel Roy (eds.), Naturalizing Phenomenology: Issues in Contemporary Phenomenology and Cognitive Science. Stanford University Press. pp. 317-329.
    The paper uses the tools of mereotopology (the theory of parts, wholes and boundaries) to work out the implications of certain analogies between the 'ecological psychology' of J. J Gibson and the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl. It presents an ontological theory of spatial boundaries and of spatially extended entities. By reference to examples from the geographical sphere it is shown that both boundaries and extended entities fall into two broad categories: those which exist independently of our cognitive acts (for example, (...)
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  18.  61
    Visual Field and Empty Space.Kristjan Laasik - 2018 - European Journal of Philosophy (published online):403-411.
    In a paper titled “Seeing Empty Space,” Louise Richardson argues for the thesis that seeing empty space involves a certain “structural feature,” namely, “it [s] seeming to one as if some region of space is one in which if some visible object were there, one would see it” (SF; Richardson, 2010, p. 237). I will argue that there is a reason to question whether a structural feature such as SF is needed in order to visually experience empty space. I will (...)
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  19.  16
    Adaptation to a rotated visual field as a function of degree of optical tilt and exposure time.Sheldon M. Ebenholtz - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 72 (5):629.
  20.  48
    Does visual-field specialization really have implications for coordinated visual-motor behavior?Richard A. Abrams - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (3):542-543.
  21. The Visual Field and Perception.D. W. Hamlyn & A. C. Lloyd - 1957 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 31:107-144.
  22.  26
    Effective visual field size necessary for vertical reading during Japanese text processing.Naoyuki Osaka & Koichi Oda - 1991 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 29 (4):345-347.
  23. Sensorimotor expectations and the visual field.Dan Cavedon-Taylor - 2018 - Synthese 198 (Suppl 17):3991-4006.
    Sensorimotor expectations concern how visual experience covaries with bodily movement. Sensorimotor theorists argue from such expectations to the conclusion that the phenomenology of vision is constitutively embodied: objects within the visual field are experienced as 3-D because sensorimotor expectations partially constitute our experience of such objects. Critics argue that there are two ways to block the above inference: to explain how we visually experience objects as 3-D, one may appeal to such non-bodily factors as expectations about movements of (...)
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  24.  9
    Typical visual-field locations facilitate access to awareness for everyday objects.Daniel Kaiser & Radoslaw M. Cichy - 2018 - Cognition 180 (C):118-122.
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  25. Three varieties of visual field.Austen Clark - 1996 - Philosophical Psychology 9 (4):477-95.
    The goal of this paper is to challenge the rather insouciant attitude that many investigators seem to adopt when they go about describing the items and events in their " visual fields". There are at least three distinct categories of interpretation of what these reports might mean, and only under one of those categories do those reports have anything resembling an observational character. The others demand substantive revisions in one's beliefs about what one sees. The ur-concept of a " (...)
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  26.  11
    Visual field asymmetries in object individuation.Irina M. Harris, Cara Wong & Sally Andrews - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 37:194-206.
  27.  22
    Visual Field Advantage: Redefined by Training?Scott A. Stone, Jared Baker, Rob Olsen, Robbin Gibb, Jon Doan, Joshua Hoetmer & Claudia L. R. Gonzalez - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  28. Peripheral visual field size necessary for visual search during Japanese text reading: effect of working memory.M. Osaka & N. Osaka - 1996 - In Enrique Villanueva (ed.), Perception. Ridgeview. pp. 75-76.
     
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  29.  12
    Transposing Gestalt Phenomena from Visual Fields to Practical and Interactional Work: Garfinkel’s and Sacks’ Social Praxeology.Michael Eisenmann Lynch - 2022 - Philosophia Scientiae:95-122.
    In lectures and writings in the decades following the publication of Studies in Ethnomethodology [1967], Harold Garfinkel, the founder of ethnomethodology, developed what he called a “misreading” of the phenomenological writings of Aron Gurwitsch, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and others. Garfinkel’s “misreading” included a selective and creative treatment of themes that Gurwitsch drew from Gestalt psychology, such as figure-ground, Gestalt contexture, and the phenomenal field. Rather than identifying these themes with visual perception demonstrated with picture-puzzles (for example, of animals hidden in (...)
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  30.  2
    Victorian science & imagery: representation & knowledge in nineteenth-century visual culture.Nancy Rose Marshall (ed.) - 2021 - Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press.
    The nineteenth century was a period of science and imagery: when scientific theories and discoveries challenged longstanding boundaries between animal, plant, and human, and art and visual culture produced new notions about the place of the human in the natural world. Just as scientists relied on graphic representation to conceptualize their ideas, artists moved seamlessly between scientific debate and creative expression to support or contradict popular scientific theories, such as Darwin's theory of evolution and sexual selection, deliberately drawing on (...)
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  31.  5
    Through the dark field: the incarnation through an aesthetics of vulnerability.Susie Paulik Babka - 2016 - Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press.
    Theology, vulnerability, and art as the consciousness of grief -- Christology positive and im-positive -- Dedication to vulnerability in the form of art -- Visual art as a resource for theology of the incarnation -- Beyond language, beyond reason: vulnerability, art, and the problem of catastrophic suffering -- The presence of the absent God: incarnation and abstract expressionism.
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  32. The Embedded Neuron, the Enactive Field?M. Chirimuuta & I. Gold - 2009 - In John Bickle (ed.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy and neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The concept of the receptive field, first articulated by Hartline, is central to visual neuroscience. The receptive field of a neuron encompasses the spatial and temporal properties of stimuli that activate the neuron, and, as Hubel and Wiesel conceived of it, a neuron’s receptive field is static. This makes it possible to build models of neural circuits and to build up more complex receptive fields out of simpler ones. Recent work in visual neurophysiology is providing evidence that the (...)
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  33.  78
    On The Material Image. Affordances as a New Approach to Visual Culture Studies.Martina Sauer & Elisabeth Günther (eds.) - 2021 - New York & São Paulo: Art Style.
    This special issue on affordances bases on the thesis, that all natural and artificial things inhere affordances that appeal to our cognitive system, and thus invite us to look at them, perceive them, think about them, interpret them, and use them. The concept roots in the studies of the American psychologist James J. Gibson from the 1960s. According to him, "things" offer a certain range of possible activities depending on their form, time patterns, and material qualities, thus becoming part of (...)
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  34.  6
    The hermeneutic spiral and interpretation in literature and the visual arts.L. M. O'Toole - 2018 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    This collection brings together eighteen of the author's original papers, previously published in a variety of academic journals and edited collections over the last three decades, on the process of interpretation in literature and the visual arts in one comprehensive volume. The volume highlights the centrality of artistic texts to the study of multimodality, organized into six sections each representing a different modality or semiotic system, including literature, television, film, painting, sculpture, and architecture. A new introduction lays the foundation (...)
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  35.  26
    Effects of the visual field upon perception of change in spatial orientation.Norman L. Corah - 1965 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 70 (6):598.
  36.  20
    Beta-Hebbian Learning to enhance unsupervised exploratory visualizations of Android malware families.Nuño Basurto, Diego García-Prieto, Héctor Quintián, Daniel Urda, José Luis Calvo-Rolle & Emilio Corchado - 2024 - Logic Journal of the IGPL 32 (2):306-320.
    As it is well known, mobile phones have become a basic gadget for any individual that usually stores sensitive information. This mainly motivates the increase in the number of attacks aimed at jeopardizing smartphones, being an extreme concern above all on Android OS, which is the most popular platform in the market. Consequently, a strong effort has been devoted for mitigating mentioned incidents in recent years, even though few researchers have addressed the application of visualization techniques for the analysis of (...)
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  37. There are no visual fields (and no minds either).Mark Johnston - 2011 - Analytic Philosophy 52 (4):231-242.
  38.  31
    Elimination of visual field effects by use of a single report technique: Evidence for order-of-report artifact.Marylin C. Smith & Susan Ramunas - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 87 (1):23.
  39.  7
    The Gibsonian visual field.Edwin G. Boring - 1952 - Psychological Review 59 (3):246-247.
  40.  23
    Transient increase of intact visual field size by high-frequency narrow-band stimulation.Mark A. Elliott, Doerthe Seifert, Dorothe A. Poggel & Hans Strasburger - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 32:45-55.
  41.  14
    Modifications of Visual Field Asymmetries for Face Categorization in Early Deaf Adults: A Study With Chimeric Faces.Marjorie Dole, David Méary & Olivier Pascalis - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  42.  7
    Arts-based research across textual media in education: expanding visual epistemology.Jason Dehart & Peaches Hash (eds.) - 2023 - New York: Routledge.
    In company with its sister volume, Arts-Based Research Across Textual Media in Education explores arts-based approaches to research across media, including film and comics-related material, from a variety of geographic locations and across a range of sub-disciplines within the field of education. This first volume takes a textual focus, capturing process, poetic, and dramaturgical approaches. The authors aim to highlight some of the approaches that are not always centered in arts-based research. The contributors represent a variety of arts-based practices and (...)
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  43.  5
    Effect of visual field motion on vestibulo-myogenic response during upright stance: A pilot study.Yawen Yu & Emily Keshner - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  44.  17
    Contemporary clay and museum culture: ceramics in the expanded field.Christie Brown, Julian Stair & Clare Twomey (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Routledge.
    This groundbreaking book is the first to provide a critical overview of the relationship between contemporary ceramics and curatorial practice in museum culture. Ceramic objects form a major part of museum collections, with connections to anthropology, archaeology and other disciplines that engage with the cultural and social history of humankind. In recent years museums have provided the impetus for cutting-edge artistic practice, either as a response to particular collections, or as part of exhibitions. But the question of how museums have (...)
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  45.  14
    The left visual field attentional advantage: No evidence of different speeds of processing across visual hemifields.Miguel A. García-Pérez & Rocío Alcalá-Quintana - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 37:16-26.
  46.  16
    The upper visual field advantage for face-processing: A product of endogenous attentional bias?Quek Genevieve & Finkbeiner Matthew - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  47. Deflationist Views of Meaning and Content.Hartry Field - 2005-01-01 - In José Medina & David Wood (eds.), Truth. Blackwell.
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  48.  18
    A response instruction by visual-field interaction: S-R compatibility effect or?Bill Cotton, Ovid J. L. Tzeng & Curtis Hardyck - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 10 (6):475-477.
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  49.  7
    Scotomas and the visual field.Adam Morton - 1983 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (3):456.
  50.  13
    Unexplained Progressive Visual Field Loss in the Presence of Normal Retinotopic Maps.Christina Moutsiana, Radwa Soliman, Lee de Wit, Merle James-Galton, Martin I. Sereno, Gordon T. Plant & D. Samuel Schwarzkopf - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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