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Sep 1996
ISBN 0262611244
528 pp.
46 illus.
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Image and Brain
Stephen M. Kosslyn

"Image and Brain attempts what is rarely seen in cognitive neuroscience: The Big Picture. To be sure, it is Kosslyn's Big Picture, but that is probably the best there is."
-- Irving Biederman, William M. Keck Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Southern California.

This long-awaited work by prominent Harvard psychologist Stephen Kosslyn integrates a twenty-year research program on the nature of high-level vision and mental imagery. Image and Brain marshals insights and empirical results from computer vision, neuroscience, and cognitive science to develop a general theory of visual mental imagery, its relation to visual perception, and its implementation in the human brain. It offers a definitive resolution to the long-standing debate about the nature of the internal representation of visual mental imagery.

Kosslyn reviews evidence that perception and representation are inextricably linked, and goes on to show how "quasi-pictorial" events in the brain are generated, interpreted, and used in cognition. The theory is tested with brain-scanning techniques that provide stronger evidence than has been possible in the past.

Known for his work in high-level vision, one of the most empirically successful areas of experimental psychology, Kosslyn uses a highly interdisciplinary approach. He reviews and integrates an extensive amount of literature in a coherent presentation, and reports a wide range of new findings using a host of techniques.

Table of Contents
 Preface
1 Resolving the Imagery Debates
2 Carving a System at Its Joints
3 High-level Vision
4 Identifying Objects in Different Locations
5 Identifying Objects When Different Portions Are Visible
6 Identifying Objects in Degraded Images
7 Identifying Contorted Objects
8 Identifying Objects: Normal and Damaged Brains
9 Generating and Maintaining Visual Images
10 Inspecting and Transforming Visual Images
11 Visual Mental Images in the Brain
 Notes
 References
 Author Index
 Subject Index
 
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