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E-grāmata: Picture Perception in Animals

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  • Formāts: 464 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Jun-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Psychology Press Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134951307
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: 464 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Jun-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Psychology Press Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134951307
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For 35 years, visual recognition by animals has been studied by showing the subjects pictures of social or non-social objects, or scenes without questioning much the validity of pictorial representations. Here comparative psychologists and cognitive neuroscientists address that issue by asking such questions as whether animals recognize visual objects or scenes on pictures despite variations in viewpoint, the extent to which birds recognize the real world from its two-dimensional representations, and whether monkeys extract gaze information from pictures. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Animal researchers commonly present pictures to their subjects, usually birds or monkeys, in order to infer how natural objects are perceived and conceptualised, or to discover the brain mechanisms underlying these abilities. This unique book questions the premise of this experimental approach and asks whether or not pictures can be considered as ecologically valid and realistic stimuli for animals.
Leading researchers in comparative psychology and neuroscience address such questions as: "Can animals recognise objects of scenes in pictures despite variations in viewpoints ; "How do animals perceive faces?" and "Is there an equivalence, in animals' minds, between pictures and the objects they represent?". The result is an authoritative and cutting-edge survey of current knowledge in the field, which underlines the advantages, limits and risks of using pictures to infer cognitive abilities or brain mechanisms in animal studies.
Picture Perception in Animals will be essential reading for comparative psychologists, anthropologists, and neuroscientists working in picture perception.
List of contributors vii Acknowledgements ix Preface xi Picture-object recognition in pigeons 1(36) Juan D. Delius Jacky Emmerton Wolfgang Horster Ralph Jager Joachim Ostheim The Pigeons perception of depth-rotated shapes 37(34) Jessie J. Peissing Michael E. Young Edward A. Wassterman Irving Biederman How do pigeons see pictures? Recognition of the real world from its 2-D representation 71(20) Shigeru Watanabe Use of pictures to investigate aspects of pigeons spatial cognition 91(16) Donald M. Wilkie Recognition of objects and spatial relations in pictures across changes in viewpoint 107(36) Marcia L. Spetch Debbie M. Kelly Sheri Reid What do birds see in moving video images? 143(38) Stephen E. G. Lea Winand H. Dittrich Pictorial same-different categorical learning and discrimination in pigeons 181(38) Robert G. Cook Jeffrey S. Katz Debbie M. Kelly Generic perception: open-ended categorization of natural classes 219(44) Ludwig Huber Picture perception in primates: The case of face perception 263(32) Olivier Pascalis Odile Petit Jun H. Kim Ruth Campbell What is the evidence for an equivalence between objects and pictures in birds and nonhuman primates? 295(26) Joel Fagot Julie Martin-Malivel Delphine Depy Reshaping neuronal representations of visual scenes through attention 321(22) Stefan Treue Julio C. Martinez Trujillo Visual cues for attention following in rhesus monkeys 343(30) Erika N. Lorincz Christopher I. Baker David I. Perrett Primates and representations of self 373(24) James R. Anderson Pictorial perception: individual and group differences within the human species 397(34) J. B. Deregowski Author index 431(12) Subject index 443