Perceptual constancy: why things look as they do/ edited by Vincent Walsh, Janusz kulkowski - Cambridge: Cambridge, 1998. - viii, 560 p.

1 Visual organization and perceptual constancies in
early infancy
Alan Slater
2 The McCollough effect: Misperception and reality
G. Keith Humphrey
3 Perception of rotated two-dimensional and three-
dimensional objects and visual shapes
Pierre Jolicoeur and G. Keith Humphrey
4 Computational approaches to shape constancy
Shimon Edelman and Daphna Weinshall
5 Learning constancies for object perception
Peter Fdldidk
6 Perceptual constancies in lower vertebrates
David Ingle
7 Generalizing across object orientation and size
Elisabeth Ashbridge and David I. Perrett
8 The neuropsychology of visual object constancy
Rebecca Lawson and Glyn W. Humphreys
9 Color constancy and color vision during infancy:
Methodological and empirical issues
James L. Dannemiller
10 Empirical studies in color constancy
Jimmy M. Troost
11 Computational models of color constancy
A. C. Hurlbert
^2 Compjirutive aspects of color constancy
Christa Neumeyer
13 The physiological substrates of color constancy
Hidehiko Konuitsu
14 Size and speed constancy
Suzanne P. McKee and Harvey S. Smallman
15 Depth constancy
Thomas S. Collett and Andrew J. Parker
16 The perception of dynamical constancies
Mary K. Kaiser
17 Perceptual learning
Merav Ahissar and Shaul Hochstein
18 The history of size constancy and size illusions
Helen E. Ross and Cornells Plug

0521460611

152.14 / WAL/P