1st Edition
Perception Beyond Gestalt Progress in vision research
Perception Beyond Gestalt: Introductory Remarks Geremek, Greenlee and Magnussen Part I: Gestalt and Perceptual Organization How much of Gestalt Theory has Survived a Century of Neuroscience? Wagemans Perceptive Fields and Receptive Fields Thomas Spatiotemporal Unity of Perception: Given or Derived? Breitmeyer What is a Perceptual Object? Beyond the Gestalt Theory of Perceptual Organization Pinna Self-organizing Properties of the Visual Field: Gestalt Forces in Action Harvey Jr and Schmidt Part II: Attention, Aftereffects and Illusions Attention, Grouping, and Non-Retinotopic Representations Öğmen and Herzog Probing Human Vision with Spatial Adaptation Greenlee and Magnussen From Hermann's Grid to Spillmann's Weaves Hamburger, Dixon and Shapiro Motion Illusions as a Psychophysical Tool to Investigate the Visual System Gori and Stubs Part III: Color Vision and Art Perception In Search of Neurophysiological Correlates to Color Perception Valberg Color and Figure-Ground: From Signals to Qualia Dresp-Langley and Reeves Chromatic Assimilation in Visual Art and Perception Devink, Pinna and Werner The Phenomenon of 'Colored Shadows' Kallman, Schramme and Neumeyer
Biography
Adam Geremek received his PhD at the Brain Research Unit, Freiburg, and is now a paediatrician specialising in child psychiatry in Schleswig, Germany.
Mark Greenlee is Professor of Experimental Psychology at the University of Regensburg, Germany.
Svein Magnussen is Professor Emeritus of Cognitive Psychology at the University of Oslo, Norway.
'I highly recommend Perception beyond Gestalt to everyone interested in the current progress of visual perception research. Gestalt research aiming at visual observations and empirical research of the brain as a whole will go on.' - Riccardo Luccio, Trieste, Gestalt Theory, Vol. 37, No.1






