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ویرایش: 1
نویسندگان: Gisa Aschersleben. Talis Bachmann and Jochen Müsseler (Eds.)
سری: Advances in Psychology 129
ISBN (شابک) : 9780444503251
ناشر: Elsevier
سال نشر: 1999
تعداد صفحات: 475
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 34 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Cognitive Contributions to the Perception of Spatial and Temporal Events به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
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Content:
Cognitive contributions to the perception of spatial and temporal events: Editors' introduction
Pages XI-XIII
GA, TB, JM
Cognitive contributions to the perception of spatial events
Page 1
Chapter 1 Separate representations of visual space for perception and visually guided behavior Original Research Article
Pages 3-13
Bruce Bridgeman
The new dissociationism: Implications for action: Commentary on Bridgeman
Pages 15-18
Patrick Haggard
Chapter 2 On the perception of position Original Research Article
Pages 19-37
A.H.C. Van der Heijden, Jochen Müsseler, Bruce Bridgeman
Function and processing of “meaningless” and “meaningful” position: Commentary on Van der Heijden et al.
Pages 39-42
Peter Wolff
Chapter 3 Space perception and intended action Original Research Article
Pages 43-63
Peter Wolff
The limits of an occasionalist Gibsonian theory of perceptual space: Commentary on Wolff
Pages 65-68
Heiko Hecht
Chapter 4 Cognition and spatial perception: Production of output or control of input? Original Research Article
Pages 69-90
J. Scott Jordan
Efference copy and intention: Old wine in New Bottles?: Commentary on Jordan
Pages 91-94
Bruce Bridgeman
Chapter 5 Motor determinants of a unified world perception Original Research Article
Pages 95-111
Jacques Paillard
A motor theory again?: Commentary on Paillard
Pages 113-115
A.H.C. van der Heijden
Can we explain cross-modal representation with neural algorithms alone?: Commentary on Paillard
Pages 117-119
Mark A. Elliott
Chapter 6 How independent from action control is perception?: An event-coding account for more equally-ranked crosstalks Original Research Article
Pages 121-147
Jochen Müsseler
Induction and impairment during event control: A means of resolving the perception-action distinction?: Commentary on Müsseler
Pages 149-151
J. Scott Jordan
Chapter 7 Effects of attention on length perception, gap detection and visual localization: Towards a theory of attentional receptive fields Original Research Article
Pages 155-166
Yehoshua Tsal
About neural implementation and microgenesis: Commentary on Tsal
Pages 167-172
Talis Bachmann
Chapter 8 Twelve spatiotemporal phenomena and one explanation Original Research Article
Pages 173-206
Talis Bachmann
Pertentional retouch, selective attention and synchronicity priming: Commentary on Bachmann
Pages 207-212
Hermann J. Müller, Mark A. Elliott
Cognitive contributions to the perception of temporal events
Page 213
Chapter 9 Perceived timing of self-initiated actions Original Research Article
Pages 215-227
Patrick Haggard
Mental chronometry and the timing of “high level” conscious intentions: Commentary on Haggard
Pages 229-231
Dan Zakay
Chapter 10 Action timing in an isochronous tapping task: Evidence from behavioral studies and neuroimaging Original Research Article
Pages 233-250
Katharina Müller, Gisa Aschersleben, Robert Koch, Hans-Joachim Freund, Wolfgang Prinz
The negative asynchrony phenomenon: A prospective timing perspective: Commentary on Müller et al.
Pages 251-257
Dan Zakay, Richard A. Block
What is the source of the mean anticipatory synchronisation error during temporal tracking?: Commentary on Müller et al
Pages 259-263
Donald J. O'Boyle
Chapter 11 Reaction time and temporal-order judgment as measures of perceptual latency: The problem of dissociations Original Research Article
Pages 265-282
Piotr Jaśkowski
Reaction time and temporal order judgment: Two measures of perceptual latency?: Commentary on Jaśkowski
Pages 283-287
Christoph Steglich
Characterising perceptual latency: Commentary on Jaśkowski
Pages 289-291
Donald J. O'Boyle
Chapter 12 Task-dependent timing of perceptual events Original Research Article
Pages 293-318
Gisa Aschersleben
Some remaining problems on temporal dissociations: Commentary on Aschersleben
Pages 319-321
Piotr Jaśkowski
Chapter 13 40-Hz-Synchronicity priming of Kanizsa-figure detection demonstrated by a novel psychophysical paradigm Original Research Article
Pages 323-340
Hermann J. Müller, Mark A. Elliott
Is 40-Hz-synchronicity priming demonstrated by a novel psychophysical paradigm indeed a 40-Hz phenomenon?: Commentary on H. Müller & Elliott
Pages 341-343
Katharina Müller
Cognitive contributions to the perception of intermodal events
Page 345
Chapter 14 Ventriloquism: A case of crossmodal perceptual grouping Original Research Article
Pages 347-362
Paul Bertelson
The advantages and limitations of the psychophysical staircases procedure in the study of intersensory bias: Commentary on Bertelson
Pages 363-369
Robert B. Welch
Chapter 15 Meaning, attention, and the “unity assumption” in the intersensory bias of spatial and temporal perceptions Original Research Article
Pages 371-387
Robert B. Welch
Ventriloquism and the nature of the unity decision: Commentary on Welch
Pages 389-393
Jean Vroomen
Chapter 16 The development of temporal and spatial intermodal perception Original Research Article
Pages 395-420
David J. Lewkowicz
On the asymmetry of the temporal contiguity window: Commentary on Lewkowicz
Pages 421-424
Gisa Aschersleben
Chapter 17 Seeing cries and hearing smiles: Crossmodal perception of emotional expressions Original Research Article
Pages 425-438
Beatrice de Gelder, Jean Vroomen, Gilles Pourtois
Crossmodal perception and the function of emotion: Commentary on de Gelder et al.
Pages 439-443
Heiko Hecht
Author index
Pages 445-456
Subject index
Pages 457-460