MIT CogNet, The Brain Sciences ConnectionFrom the MIT Press, Link to Online Catalog
SPARC Communities
Subscriber : Stanford University Libraries » LOG IN

space

Powered By Google 
Advanced Search

Selected Title Details  
Mar 1997
ISBN 0262181770
350 pp.
101 illus.
BUY THE BOOK
Indirect Perception
Irvin Rock

Irvin Rock was a global perceptual theorist in the grand tradition of von Helmoltz, Wertheimer, and Gibson. This posthumous volume, the culmination of a long and distinguished career, brings together an original essay by the author together with a careful selection of previously published articles (most by Rock) on the theory that perception is an indirect process in which visual experience is derived by inference, rather than being directly and independently determined by retinal stimulation.

Rock's reasons for holding that perception is indirect were mainly empirical. Unlike many theorists, he paid close attention to a broad range of experimental evidence in evaluating theoretical claims. His approach, in which theory and experiment go hand in hand, is well represented in this book.

In the first chapter, which is new, Rock lays out the theoretical issues underlying indirect perception. The remaining twenty-two chapters present detailed evidence in support of the indirect view. They are divided into sections covering indirect perception, organization, shape, motion, illusions, lightness, and final considerations. Each section is introduced by the author. Stephen Palmer's introduction to the book places Rock's work within the context of the history of perceptual theory -- approaches formulated by Helmholtz (inferential), by the Gestaltist psychologists (organizational), and by Gibson (ecological).

Cognitive Psychology series

Table of Contents
 Series Foreword
by Stephen E. Palmer
 Foreword: The Legacy of Irvin Rock
I On Direct Perception
1 The Concept of Indirect Perception
by Irvin Rock
2 Percept-Percept Couplings
by William Epstein
II Perceptual Organization
3 Grouping and Proximity
by Irvin Rock and Leonard Brosgole
4 Grouping and Lightness
by Irvin Rock, Romi Nijhawan, Stephen E. Palmer and Leslie Tudor
5 Grouping and Amodal Completion
by Stephen E. Palmer, Jonathan Neff and Diane Beck
III Shape
6 Shape and the Retinal Image
by Irvin Rock and Christopher M. Linnett
7 Anorthoscopic Perception
by Irvin Rock
8 Induced Form
by Irvin Rock and Alan L. Gilchrist
9 Orientation and Form
by Irvin Rock
10 Symmetry
by Irvin Rock and Robin Leaman
11 The Right Angle
by Donatella Ferrante, Walter Gerbino and Irvin Rock
12 Masking
by Charles W. White
13 Symmetry Based on Figure Halves
by Janet P. Szylk, Irvin Rock and Celia B. Fisher
IV Motion
14 The Perception of Movement
by Irvin Rock
15 Apparent Motion Based on Phenomenal Location
by Irvin Rock and Sheldon Ebenholtz
16 Apparent Motion Based on Changing Phoria
by Hiroshi Ono and Gail Gonda
17 Apparent Movement in Tridimensional Space
by Fred Attneave and Gene Block
18 Motion Aftereffects and Retinal Motion
by Arien Mack, James Hill and Steven Kahn
19 Speed Constancy and Size Constancy
by Irvin Rock, A. Lewis Hill and Mark Fineman
V Illusions
20 The Müller-Lyer Illusion Reexamined
by Romi Nijhawan
21 The Conditions for Perceiving Dynamic Occlusion of a Line
by Irvin Rock and Alan L. Gilchrist
VI Lightness
22 Perceived Lightness Depends on Perceived Spatial Arrangement
by Alan L. Gilchrist
VII Final Considerations
23 The Organization of Perceived Space
by Walter C. Gogel
 Index
 
Options
Related Topics
Psychology


© 2010 The MIT Press
MIT Logo