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OverviewThe book is concerned with the cognitive contributions to perception, that is, with the influence of attention, intention, or motor processes on performances in spatial and temporal tasks. The chapters deal with fundamental perceptual processes resulting from the simple localization of an object in space or from the temporal determination of an event within a series of events. Chapters are based on presentations given at the Full Product DetailsAuthor: G. Aschersleben (Max Planck Institute for Psychological Research, Leopoldstrasse 24, 80802 Munich, Germany.) , T. Bachmann (Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth, King Henry I Street, Portsmouth PO1 2DY, UK.) , J. Müsseler (Max Planck Institute for Psychological Research, Leopoldstrasse 24, 80802 Munich, Germany.) , etc.Publisher: Elsevier Science & Technology Imprint: Elsevier Science Ltd Volume: v.129 Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.870kg ISBN: 9780444503251ISBN 10: 0444503250 Pages: 476 Publication Date: 18 November 1999 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of Contents"Part and chapter headings: Cognitive Contributions to the Perception of Spatial Events a) Action-Oriented Views. Separate Representations of Visual Space for Perception and Visually Guided Behavior (B. Bridgeman). On the Perception of Position (A.H.C. Van der Heijden et al.). Space Perception and Intended Action (P. Wolff). Cognition and Spatial Perception: Production of Output or Control of Input? (J. Scott Jordan). Motor Determinants of a Unified World Perception (J. Paillard). How Independent from Action Control is Perception? An Event-Coding Account for More Equally-Ranked Crosstalks (J. Müsseler). Cognitive Contributions to the Perception of Spatial Events b) Attention-Oriented Views. Effects of Attention on Length Perception, Gap Detection and Visual Localization. Towards a Theory of Attentional Receptive Fields (Yehoshua Tsal). Twelve Spatiotemporal Phenomena and One Explanation (T. Bachman). Cognitive Contributions to the Perception of Temporal Events. Perceived Timing of Self-Initiated Actions (P. Haggard). Action Timing in an Isochronous Tapping Task. Evidence from Behavioral Studies and Neuroimaging (K. Müller et al.). Reaction Time and Temporal-Order Judgment as Measures of Perceptual Latency: The Problem of Dissociations (P. Jaśkowski). Task-Dependent Timing of Perceptual Events (G. Aschersleben). 40-Hz-Synchronicity Priming of Kanizsa-Figure Detection Demonstrated by a Novel Psychophysical Paradigm (H.J. Müller, M.A. Elliott). Cognitive Contributions to the Perception of Intermodal Events. Ventriloquism: A Case of Crossmodal Perceptual Grouping (P. Bertelson). Meaning, Attention, and the ""Unity Assumption"" in the Intersensory Bias of Spatial and Temporal Perceptions (R.B. Welch). The Development of Temporal and Spatial Intermodal Perception (D.J. Lewkowicz). Seeing Cries and Hearing Smiles: Crossmodal Perception of Emotional Expressions (B. de Gelder et al.). Indexes."ReviewsAuthor InformationGlsa Aschersleben worked as research and teaching assistant from 1987 to 1991 at the Psychological Institute of the Technical University in Munich, her main research interests then being man-computer interaction and software ergonomics. Since 1991 she has been a senior researcher at the Department for Cognition and Action at the Max Planck Institute for Psychological Research in Munich. In 1993 she completed her thesis in psychology on Afferent Information Processing and the Synchronization of Events. Her habilitation was on Task Dependent Timing of Perceptual Events (1998). At present her main research interests are: temporal control of actions, cognitive representations of actions, perception-action, coupling, attention, intersensory integration. Jochen Müsseler worked as research assistant and teaching assistant in Cognitive Psychology and Psycholinguistics at the Universities of Bochum, Bielefeld, and Munich. Since 1996 he has been senior scientist at the Department for Cognition and Action at the Max Planck Institute for Psychological Research in Munich. His current research interests focus on the interface of perception and action, the cognitive representation of actions, the perception of space and time, and the attention mechanisms. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |