Publication | Open Access
Psychophysical evidence for separate channels for the perception of form, color, movement, and depth
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Citations
124
References
1987
Year
Psychophysical EvidenceCognitionPerceptionAttentionSocial SciencesEarly VisionVisual Information ProcessingCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsMultisensory IntegrationPerception SystemCognitive ScienceVisual PathwayVisual ProcessingVisual FunctionSystems NeuroscienceEye TrackingSeparate ChannelsNeuroscience
Physiological and anatomical findings in the primate visual system, as well as clinical evidence in humans, suggest that different components of visual information processing are segregated into largely independent parallel pathways. Such a segregation leads to certain predictions about human vision. In this paper we describe psychophysical experiments on the interactions of color, form, depth, and movement in human perception, and we attempt to correlate these aspects of visual perception with the different subdivisions of the visual system.
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