edited by Lucia M. Vaina, Scott A. Beardsley, Simon K. Rushton.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Dordrecht ; London
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Springer
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2011
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
1 volume ; 24 cm.
SERIES
Series Title
Synthese library, v. 324
GENERAL NOTES
Text of Note
Originally published: 2004.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
List of Contributors. Preface. 1: Optic Flow-Neurophysiology & Psychophysics. 1. Multiple Cortical Representations of Optic Flow Processing; M. Raffi, R.M. Siegel. 2. Optic Flow and Vestibular Self-Movement Cues: Multi-Sensory Interactions in Cortical Area MST; C.J. Duffy, W.K. Page. 3. A Visual Mechanism for Extraction of Heading Information in Complex Flow Fields; M.W. von Grunau, M. Iordanova. 4. Eye Movements and an Object-Based Model of Heading Perception; Ranxiao F. Wang, J.E. Cutting. 5. Short-Latency Eye Movements: Evidence for Rapid, Parallel Processing of Optic Flow; F.A. Miles, C. Busettini, G.S. Masson, D.S. Yang. 6. Functional Neuroanatomy of Heading Perception in Humans; L.M. Vaina, S. Soloviev. 7. The Event Structure of Motion Perception; M.H. Fischer, H. Hecht. 2: Optic Flow Processing and Computation. 8. Modeling Observer and Object Motion Perception; C.S. Royden. 9. Linking Perception and Neurophysiology for Motion Pattern Processing: The Computational Power of Inhibitory Connections in Cortex; S.A. Beardsley, L.M. Vaina. 10. Circular Receptive Field Structures for Flow Analysis and Heading Detection; J.A. Beintema, A.V. van den Berg, M. Lappe. 11. Parametric Measurements of Optic Flow by Humans; J.F. Barraza, N.M. Grzywacz. 12. Fast Processing of Image Motion Patterns Arising from 3-D Translational Motion; V. Sundareswaran, S.A. beardsley, L.M. Vaina. 13. On the Computation of Image Motion and Heading in a 3-D Cluttered Scene; M.S. Langer, R. Mann. 3: Visual Locomotionand Beyond. 14. From Optic Flow to Laws of Control; W.H. Warren, B.R. Fajen. 15. Egocentric Direction and Locomotion; S.K. Rushton. 16. The Utility of Not Changing Direction and the Visual Guidance of Locomotion; S.K. Rushton, J.M. Harris. 17. Gaze Behaviors During Adaptive Human Locomotion: Insights into How Vision is Used to Regulate Locomotion; A.E. Patla. 18. How do We Control High Speed Steering? J.P. Wann, R.M. Wilkie. 19. Model-Based Control of Perception/Action; J.M. Loomis, A.C. Beall. 20. A Neural Model for Biological Movement Recognition: A Neurophysiologically Plausible Theory; M.A. Giese. 21. Controlling Bipedal Movement Using Optic Flow; M.A. Lewis. Glossary. Index.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Human information processing.
Visual evoked response.
Visual perception.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CLASSIFICATION
Class number
QP493
Book number
.
E358
2011
PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY
edited by Lucia M. Vaina, Scott A. Beardsley, Simon K. Rushton.