Seeing black and white
by
 
Gilchrist, Alan L.

Title
Seeing black and white

Author
Gilchrist, Alan L.

ISBN
9780195187168

Personal Author
Gilchrist, Alan L.

Publication Information
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2006.

Physical Description
xvi, 430 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.

Series
Oxford psychology series ; no. 40.

Series Title
Oxford psychology series ; no. 40.

General Note
Series from jacket.

Contents
1. Introduction -- 2. The classic period -- 3. The Katz period -- 4. The gestalt period -- 5. The contrast period -- 6. The computational period -- 7. Computational models -- 8. Illumination perception -- 9. The anchoring problem -- 10. Errors in lightness -- 11. An anchoring model of errors -- 12. Theories of lightness -- 13. Concluding thoughts.

Abstract
"In Seeing Black and White, Alan Gilchrist ties together over 30 years of his own research on lightness, and presents the first comprehensive, historical review of empirical work on lightness, covering the past 150 years of research on images ranging from the simple to the complex. He also describes and analyzes the many theories of lightness - including his own - showing what each can and cannot explain. Gilchrist highlights the forgotten yet exciting work done in the first third of the twentieth century, describing several crucial experiments and examining the brilliant but nearly unknown work of the Hungarian gestalt theorist Lajos Kardos." "As both the first comprehensive overview of research on lightness and the first unified presentation of Gilchrist's new theoretical framework, Seeing Black and White will be a valuable resource for vision scientists, cognitive psychologists, and cognitive neuroscientists."--BOOK JACKET.

Subject Term
Brightness perception.

Electronic Access
Table of contents only http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0610/2006008510.html