
Color Perception : Physiology, Processes and Analysis.
Başlık:
Color Perception : Physiology, Processes and Analysis.
Yazar:
Skusevich, Darius.
ISBN:
9781617618666
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (300 pages)
Seri:
Neuroscience Research Progress
İçerik:
COLOR PERCEPTION:PHYSIOLOGY, PROCESSESAND ANALYSIS -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- CORTICAL AND SUBCORTICAL PROCESSINGOF COLOR: A DUAL PROCESSINGMODEL OF VISUAL INPUTS -- ABSTRACT -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. EXPERIMENT 1: HEMISPHERIC ASYMMETRYIN COLOR PROCESSING -- 2.1. Background -- 2.1.1. Anatomical Asymmetry of Brain -- 2.1.2. Hemispheric Lateralization of Cerebral Functions -- 2.1.3. Hemispheric Asymmetry Using Reaction Time -- 2.1.4. Reaction Time Task Based Upon Double Crossed Projections -- 2.2. Experiment 1-1: Reaction Time Difference by Dominantand Non-Dominant Hands -- 2.2.1. Purpose -- 2.2.2. Methods -- 2.2.2.1. Participants -- 2.2.2.2. Apparatus -- 2.2.2.3. Procedures -- 2.2.3. Results -- 2.2.4.Discussion -- 2.3. Experiment 1-2: Hemispheric Asymmetry of Color Detection in Right-Handed Individuals -- 2.3.1. Purpose -- 2.3.2. Materials and Methods -- 2.3.2.1. Participants -- 2.3.2.2. Apparatus -- 2.3.2.3. Procedures -- 2.3.3. Results -- 2.3.4. Discussion -- 2.4. Experiment 1-3: Hemispheric Asymmetry of Color Detection in Left-Handed Individuals -- 2.4.1. Purpose -- 2.4.2. Methods -- 2.4.2.1. Participants -- 2.4.2.2. Apparatus and Procedures -- 2.4.3. Results -- 2.4.4. Discussion -- 2.5. Experiment 1-4: Hemispheric Asymmetry of Non-Color Detection inRight- and Left-Handed Individuals -- 2.5.1. Purpose -- 2.5.2. Methods -- 2.5.2.1. Participants -- 2.5.2.2. Apparatus -- 2.5.2.3. Procedures -- 2.5.3. Results -- 2.5.4. Discussion -- 2.5.4.1. Effect of Luminance on Hemispheric Asymmetry -- 2.5.4.2. Effect of Contrast on Hemispheric Asymmetry -- 2.5.4.3. Effect of Practice on Visual Field Difference -- 2.5.4.4. Effect of Subject Number Size -- 2.6. Experiment 1-5: Hemispheric Asymmetry of Color Discrimination withVerbal Cue in Right-Handed Individuals -- 2.6.1. Purpose -- 2.6.2. Methods -- 2.6.2.1. Participants -- 2.6.2.2. Apparatus.
2.6.2.3. Procedures -- 2.6.3. Results -- 2.6.4. Discussion -- 2.7. Experiment 1-6: Hemispheric Asymmetry of Color Discriminationwithout Verbal Cue in Right-Handed Individuals -- 2.7.1. Purpose -- 2.7.2. Methods -- 2.7.2.1. Participants -- 2.7.2.2. Apparatus -- 2.7.2.3. Procedures -- 2.7.3. Results -- 2.7.4. Discussion -- 3. EXPERIMENT 2: PREPULSE INHIBITION OF STARTLE BLINKRESPONSE USING COLOR PREPULSE -- 3.1. Background -- 3.1.1. Startle Response -- 3.1.2. Prepulse Inhibition -- 3.2. Purpose -- 3.3. Methods -- 3.3.1. Participants -- 3.3.2. Apparatus -- 3.3.3. Prepulse -- 3.3.4. Startle Stimulus -- 3.3.5. Recordings Of Blinking -- 3.3.6. Procedures -- 3.4. Results -- 3.4.1. Measurements of the Response Amplitude -- 3.4.2. Typical Example of PPI of the Blink Response -- 3.4.3. Responses to Chromatic and Achromatic Prepulses -- 3.5. Discussions -- 3.5.1. Three Types of Blink Reflexes -- 3.5.2. Eyelid and Eye Movements During Blinking -- 3.5.3. Neural Circuit for PPI -- 3.5.4. Effect of Change in Luminance -- 3.5.5. Cortical Contributions to PPI -- 4. PARARELL PROCESSING IN THE VISUAL SYSTEM -- 4.1. Two Visual Pathways -- 4.2. Two Visual Streams -- 4.3. Three Hierarchies of the Brain -- 4.4. Limbic System -- 4.5. Dual Processing Circuits of Visual Inputs -- 4.6. Physiological Studies in Humans: Synchronous Activity ofInferotemporal Cortex and Amygdala -- 4.7. Blindsight and Extrageniculate Visual Pathway -- 4.8. Amygdala and the Affective Disorders -- 4.9. Amygdala Regulates the Prefrontal Cortical Activity -- 4.10. Multimodal Processing for Object Recognition -- 5. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- COLOR: ONTOLOGICAL STATUSAND EPISTEMIC ROLE -- ABSTRACT -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. THE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF COLOR AND ITSINFLUENCE ON THE ORGANISM -- 1.1. Newton on the Properties of Light and Color.
1.2. Interaction of the Color-Sensing Elements of the Eye -- 1.3. The Color Perception and the Mutual Interaction of Various Systems ofthe Organism -- 1.4. The Mechanisms of Mutual Influence of Sense Organs -- Ephaptic Connections -- Irradiation Effect. The Rule of Leveling and Exaggeration -- Connections between Centers -- The Role of the Vegetative Nervous System -- Sensor Conditioned Reflexes -- The Changing of Physiological Readiness of the Organism to Perception -- 2. THE SOURCE OF THE MYTHS ABOUT EXPERIENCE:THE PRINCIPLE OF THE BEING AND THINKING IDENTITY -- 1.1. The History of the Principle of the Being and Thinking Identity -- Parmenides -- Plato -- Aristotle -- Descartes -- Necessity -- Sufficiency -- Leibnitz -- Wittgenstein -- Modern Analytic Tradition -- 2) Sufficiency -- 1) Necessity -- 2.2. Critical Arguments against Experience -- 2) Historical Development of the Scientific Fact (L. Fleck) -- 3) Theoretical Ladenness of Observations (P. Duhem, N. R. Hanson, T. Kun,P. Feyerabend) -- 4) Impossibility to Draw a Line between Theory and Experience (G.Maxwell) -- 2.3. The Myths about Experience: Passivity and Discreteness of Perception -- The Thesis of Underdeterminacy as a Corollary of Perception Activity -- Historical Development of the Scientific Fact as a Corollary of the PerceptionActivity -- Theoretical Ladenness of Observations as a Corollary of the PerceptionActivity -- Impossibility of Drawing a Boundary between Theory and Experience as aCorollary of the Perception Activity -- The Principle of Empirical Holism -- 2.4. The Difficulties of the Picture Theory from the Point of View of theEmpirical Holism Principle -- 3. COLOR REALISM AND OTHER PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES OF THEMUTUAL INFLUENCE OF SENSE ORGANS -- 3.1. Color and Realism: Continuity of Experience as a Source of Belief inExistence -- 3.2. The Color and Cognition.
Example of Presetting Influence on the Possibility of Observation -- CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- THE BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCEOF COLOUR PERCEPTION -- ABSTRACT -- What Is Colour? -- Biological Colourations in Living Organisms -- Pigment Based Colouration -- Structure Based Colourations -- Bioluminescence: Colourations from Light -- Functional Anatomy of Colour Vision across the Species -- Colour Vision in Non-Humans -- Colour and the Human Visual System -- Comparative Psychophysics and the Biological Role of Colour Perception inAnimals -- Deceptive Signalling or Camouflage -- Advertising and Mate Choice -- Repulsive Signalling -- Additional Functions -- Colour Perception in Man: Context Effects, Culture and Colour Symbolism -- Context Effects in Colour Perception -- Colour Perception and Cultural Differences -- Colour Symbolism and Emotions -- REFERENCES -- INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN COLOUR VISION -- ABSTRACT -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE FUNDAMENTALS -- 3. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN -- A. STIMULUS GENERATING SYSTEM -- B. PSYCHOPHYSICAL TEST -- C. SAMPLE -- 4. DIFFERENCES IN THE MODEL OF COLOUR VISION -- 4. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- COLOR-SENSITIVE NEURONSIN THE VISUAL CORTEX:AN INTERACTIVE VIEW OF THE VISUAL SYSTEM -- ABSTRACT -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. COLOR PROCESSING IN THE PRIMATEBRAIN-GENERAL OVERVIEW -- 2.1. Evidences For and Against the Segregation Hypothesis -- 2.1.1. Early Visual Areas -- 2.1.2. Higher Visual Areas -- 2.2. Evidences For and Against a Specialized Color Centre in the Primate -- CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- IS COLOUR COMPOSITION PHENOMENAL?∗ -- ABSTRACT -- 1. A SHORT HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF THE PHENOMENALISTVIEW ABOUT COLOUR COMPOSITION -- 2. THE PHENOMENAL EVIDENCES FOR THE UNITARY/BINARYCOLOUR DISTINCTION -- 3. THE PHENOMENAL EVIDENCES FOR COLOUR COMPOSITION.
4. MIXING WATER AND MIXING COLOURS -- REFERENCES -- COLOR IMAGE RESTORATION AND THEAPPLICATION TO COLOR PHOTO DENOISING -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. BACKGROUND -- 2.1. Direct Partial Differential Equation-Based Anisotropic Diffusion -- 2.2. Variational Approaches -- 2.3. Statistics-Based Anisotropic Diffusion -- 2.4. Color Image Denoising and HSI Space -- 2.5. Gradient Vector Flow Field -- 3. COLOR PHOTO DENOISING VIA HSI DIFFUSION -- 3.1. Intensity Diffusion -- 3.2. Hue Diffusion -- 3.3. Saturation Diffusion -- 4. EXPERIMENTS -- 5. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCE -- COLOR IN PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH: TOWARDA SYSTEMATIC METHOD OF MEASUREMENT -- REFERENCES -- COLOR IN AQUACULTURE. AN IMPORTANCEOF CAROTENOIDS PIGMENTS IN AQUACULTUREOF SALMON AND ECHINODERMS -- ABSTRACT -- INTRODUCTION -- CAROTENOIDS AS COLORANTS OF SALMONOID FLESH -- SEA URCHIN AQUACULTURE -- CAROTENOIDS OF SEA URCHINS AND THEIR EFFECTSON ANIMAL HEALTH -- Effect of a Diet on Roe Color -- Relationship between Roe Color and Carotenoid Content -- REFERENCES -- BLACK ENOUGH?: NEEDED EXAMINATIONOF SKIN COLOR AMONG CORPORATE AMERICA -- ABSTRACT -- INTRODUCTION -- History & Current Ramifications of Colorism/Skin Color Bias -- Colorism in the Workplace -- CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- COLOR IN WEIGHTLESSNESS CONDITIONS:"μGORIENTING" PROJECT -- ABSTRACT -- ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- WIUD EXPERIMENT: COLORS AND VISUAL STIMULIFOR OUTER SPACE HABITABILITY -- ABSTRACT -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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