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Shepard RN. Psychophysical complementarity. In: Perceptual Organization (M. Kubovy and J.M.Pomerantz eds). Erlbaum. 1981. Hillsdale NJ.

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An Operating Environment For Large Scale Virtual Reality - Pettifer (1999)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

....a notional or conceptual space that we perceive to exist beyond our physical bodies. Although not usually associated with the experience of presence in virtual environments, models of reality in which the phenomenal and the physical are considered distinct abound in philosophical works [bJM34, She81, Rus48] In such models, we are only directly aware of the mind s constructs that form the phenomenal world, and have but indirect knowledge of the physical world by inference from observation and critical reasoning. In addition to a fundamental division between physical and phenomenal, suggests ....

R. N. Shepard. Psychophysical complementarity. In M. Kubovy and J. R. Pomerantz, editors, Perceptual organization. Erlbaum, Hillsdale, NJ, 1981.


Image Acquisition Systems and Biological Vision: Common.. - Wandell, Gamal   (Correct)

....systems for image reproduction. There are two areas of commonality. First, biological vision and technical image systems generally work with common input data: natural images. Hence, the two types of systems are linked by the need to work across the range of constraints imposed by natural images [2]. Natural image data span a particular dynamic range, have certain characteristic space time correlations, and contain various typical types of motion. Encoding the image data accurately is a necessary step for both image analysis and image reproduction. The properties of natural images set common ....

R. N. Shepard, "Psychophysical complementarity," in Perceptual Organization, M. K. a. J. Pomerantz, Ed. N.J., 1981, pp. 279-341.


Common Principles of Image Acquisition Systems and.. - Wandell, Gamal, Girod (2002)   (Correct)

....2002 IEEE PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE, VOL. 90, NO. 1, JANUARY 2002 5 logical vision and engineered image systems generally work with common input data: natural images. Hence, the two types of systems are linked by the need to work across the range of constraints imposed by natural images [2]. Natural image data span a particular dynamic range, have certain characteristic space time correlations, and contain various typical types of motion. Encoding the image data accurately is a necessary step for both image analysis and image reproduction. The properties of natural images set common ....

R. N. Shepard, "Psychophysical complementarity," in Perceptual Organization, M. Kubovy and J. R. Pomerantz, Eds. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1981, pp. 279--341.


Internalization: A metaphor we can live without - Kubovy, Epstein   Self-citation (Shepard)   (Correct)

....t 1 t 2 t t # 1 t # 2 t # Figure 4. Shepard s schema of the projective (p) formational ( f # ) and transformational mappings between distal objects (A, B, and C) proximal stimuli (A # ,B # and C # ) and internal representations (A # ,B # , and C # ) Redrawn from Shepard, 1981, Fig. 10 1, p. 295. linguistics. 5 In 1981, Shepard offered the diagram shown in Figure 4 to illustrate his concept of psychophysical complementarity and illustrate its application to mental rotation. It is particularly interesting to note that he calls the internal representation Deep ....

Shepard, R. N. (1981). Psychophysical complementarity. In M. Kubovy & J. R. Pomerantz (Eds.), Perceptual organization (pp. 279--341). Hillsdale, NJ, USA: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.


Turning `The Hard Problem' Upside Down Sideways - Hut, Shepard (1996)   Self-citation (Shepard)   (Correct)

....particular kinds of visual experiences. This type of analysis of intersubjectivity in science was long ago advocated by the Nobel laureate physicist Percy Bridgeman (1940) and, before him, by the philosopher Rudolf Carnap (1928) It has sometimes been referred to as methodological solipsism (cf. Shepard 1981). It may seem that the hard problem, though inverted, is still with us. Before, we started with a physical world and found it difficult to understand: ffl how nonphysical conscious experience could arise in this physical world, 8 Upside Down Sideways 1 July 1996 ffl why it would arise only ....

Shepard, R.N. (1981), `Psychophysical complementarity,' in Perceptual organization, eds. M. Kubovy and J. Pomerantz (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum), p. 280.


A Technique for Maintaining Continuity of - Experience In Networked   (Correct)

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Shepard RN. Psychophysical complementarity. In: Perceptual Organization (M. Kubovy and J.M.Pomerantz eds). Erlbaum. 1981. Hillsdale NJ.


The Information Processing Approach To Cognition - Stephen Palmer University (1984)   (3 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

Shepard, R. N. (1981). Psychophysical complementarity. In M. Kubovy & J. R. Pomerantz (Eds.), Perceptual organization. Hillsdale, N.J.: Lawrence Eralbaum Associates.

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