"This book marks a new era in the study of the more
"cognitive" aspects of vision. An interdisciplinary
approach is used in a creative, careful, and rigorous way to produce
deep insights into the nature of fundamental problems and their viable
solutions. This book must be read by anyone interested in visual
perception, natural or artificial."
-- Stephen M. Kosslyn, Professor of Psychology,
Harvard University
In this book, Shimon Ullman focuses on the processes of high-level
vision that deal with the interpretation and use of what is seen in
the image. In particular, he examines two major problems. The first,
object recognition and classification, involves recognizing objects
despite large variations in appearance caused by changes in viewing
position, illumination, occlusion, and object shape. The second,
visual cognition, involves the extraction of shape properties and
spatial relations in the course of performing visual tasks such as
object manipulation, planning movements in the environment, or
interpreting graphical material such as diagrams, graphs and maps.
The book first takes up object recognition and develops a novel
approach to the recognition of three-dimensional objects. It then
studies a number of related issues in high-level vision, including
object classification, scene segmentation, and visual cognition.
Using computational considerations discussed throughout the book,
along with psychophysical and biological data, the final chapter
proposes a model for the general flow of information in the visual
cortex.
Understanding vision is a key problem in the brain sciences, human
cognition, and artificial intelligence. Because of the
interdisciplinary nature of the theories developed in this work,
High-Level Vision will be of interest to readers in all
three of these fields.
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