Results for 'Object perception'

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  1.  17
    Paticipatory Object Perception.Ezequiel A. Di Paolo - 2016 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 23 (5-6):228-258.
    Social factors have so far been neglected in embodied theories of perception despite the wealth of phenomenological insights and empirical evidence indicating their importance. I examine evidence from developmental psychology and neuroscience and attempt an initial classification according to whether social factors play a contextual, enabling, or constitutive role in the ability to perceive objects in a detached manner, i.e. beyond their immediate instrumental use. While evidence of cross-cultural variations in perceptual styles and the influence of social cues on (...)
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  2. Object Perception: Vision and Audition.Casey O’Callaghan - 2008 - Philosophy Compass 3 (4):803-829.
    Vision has been the primary focus of naturalistic philosophical research concerning perception and perceptual experience. Guided by visual experience and vision science, many philosophers have focused upon theoretical issues dealing with the perception of objects. Recently, however, hearing researchers have discussed auditory objects. I present the case for object perception in vision, and argue that an analog of object perception occurs in auditory perception. I propose a notion of an auditory object that (...)
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  3.  86
    Principles of object perception.Elizabeth S. Spelke - 1990 - Cognitive Science 14 (1):29--56.
    Research on human infants has begun to shed light on early-developing processes for segmenting perceptual arrays into objects. Infants appear to perceive objects by analyzing three-dimensional surface arrangements and motions. Their perception does not accord with a general tendency to maximize figural goodness or to attend to nonaccidental geometric relations in visual arrays. Object perception does accord with principles governing the motions of material bodies: Infants divide perceptual arrays into units that move as connected wholes, that move (...)
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  4.  29
    Object perception.Elizabeth S. Spelke - 1993 - In Alvin I. Goldman (ed.), Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  5. Object perception: When our brain is impressed but we do not notice it.Michael Bach - unknown
    Although our eyes receive incomplete and ambiguous information, our perceptual system is usually able to successfully construct a stable representation of the world. In the case of ambiguous figures, however, perception is unstable, spontaneously alternating between equally possible outcomes. The present study compared EEG responses to ambiguous figures and their unambiguous variants. We found that slight figural changes, which turn ambiguous figures into unambiguous ones, lead to a dramatic difference in an ERP (“event-related potential”) component at around 400 ms. (...)
     
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  6.  5
    Objective Perception.John Haugeland - 1996 - In Enrique Villanueva (ed.), Perception. Ridgeview Pub. Co.
    This chapter qualifies the term objective perception to be exclusive to people, without presuming that all human perception is objective, but asserting that some definitely are. Objectivity, pertaining to perception, is defined to be the formal structure that envelops the perceiver, the act of perceiving, that which is perceived, and their interrelationships. The succeeding sections tackle a fundamental question regarding the object—which is perceived, and why it is “selectively” perceived from an array of other causal factors (...)
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  7. Bodily self-awareness and object perception.Shaun Gallagher - 2003 - Theoria Et Historia Scientarum 7 (1):53--68.
    Gallagher, S. 2003. Bodily self-awareness and object perception. _Theoria et Historia Scientiarum: International Journal for Interdisciplinary_ _Studies_, 7 (1) - in press.
     
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  8. Feature binding, attention and object perception.Anne Treisman - 1998 - Phil Trans R. Soc London B 353:1295-1306.
  9.  16
    Tactile object perception and the perceptual stream.Roberta L. Klatzky & Susan J. Lederman - 2002 - In Liliana Albertazzi (ed.), Unfolding Perceptual Continua. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp. 41--147.
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  10. Framing Effects in Object Perception.Spencer Ivy & Aleksandra Mroczko-Wąsowicz - 2025 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 1:1-28.
    In this paper we argue that object perception may be affected by what we call “perceptual frames.” Perceptual frames are adaptations of the perceptual system that guide how perceptual objects are singled out from a sensory environment. These adaptations are caused by perceptual learning and realized through bottom-up functional processes such that sensory information is organized in a subject-dependent way leading to idiosyncratic perceptual object representations. Through domain-specific training, perceptual learning, and the acquisition of object-knowledge, it (...)
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  11.  32
    Multisensory object perception in infancy: 4-month-olds perceive a mistuned harmonic as a separate auditory and visual object.Nicholas A. Smith, Nicole A. Folland, Diana M. Martinez & Laurel J. Trainor - 2017 - Cognition 164 (C):1-7.
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  12.  61
    Object perception and object-directed reaching in infancy.Claes von Hofsten & Elizabeth S. Spelke - 1985 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 114 (2):198-212.
  13. Object Perception: Four Philosophical Arguments.Mohan Matthen - 2024 - Cognitive Processing 25 (supplement).
    In this short paper, I outline four philosophical arguments concerning the objects we perceive. These arguments build up to the conclusion that the objects of perceptual experience are material objects. I then show that the first three of these arguments parallel important psychological positions in vision science. Thus, (1) the notion of object used in Logical Atomism resembles the concept as it is defined in the Feature Integration Theory of Treisman and Gelade (1980). But (2) Frank Jackson's (1975) Many-Property (...)
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  14. Object perception, perceptual recognition, and that-perception introduction.Vincent Hope - 2009 - Philosophy 84 (4):515-528.
    The philosophy of perception currently considers how perception relates to action. Some distinctions may help, distinguishing object perception from perceptual recognition, and both from that-perception. Examples are seeing a man, recognising a man, and seeing that there is a man. Perceiving an object controls self-location by its recognising an object, which depends on memory of how it looks, controls looking for it and interacting with it, or not, and that-perceiving controls saying that an (...)
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  15. Object perception and recognition: A model for the scientific study of consciousness.J. Delacour - 1997 - Theory and Psychology 7:257-62.
  16. Perceptual variation in object perception: A defence of perceptual pluralism.Berit Brogaard & Thomas Alrik Sørensen - 2023 - In Aleksandra Mroczko-Wrasowicz & Rick Grush (eds.), Sensory Individuals: Unimodal and Multimodal Perspectives. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 113–129.
    The basis of perception is the processing and categorization of perceptual stimuli from the environment. Much progress has been made in the science of perceptual categorization. Yet there is still no consensus on how the brain generates sensory individuals, from sensory input and perceptual categories in memory. This chapter argues that perceptual categorization is highly variable across perceivers due to their use of different perceptual strategies for solving perceptual problems they encounter, and that the perceptual system structurally adjusts to (...)
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  17. The object properties model of object perception: Between the binding model and the theoretical model.Jose Bermudez - 2007 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 14 (9-10):43-65.
    This article proposes an object properties approach to object perception. By thinking about objects as clusters of co-instantiated features that possess certain canonical higher-order object properties we can steer a middle way between two extreme views that are dominant in different areas of empirical research into object perception and the development of the object concept. Object perception should be understood in terms of perceptual sensitivity to those object properties, where that (...)
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  18.  76
    Binding and differentiation in multisensory object perception.E. J. Green - 2019 - Synthese 198 (5):4457-4491.
    Cognitive scientists have long known that the modalities interact during perceptual processing. Cross-modal illusions like the ventriloquism effect show that the course of processing in one modality can alter the course of processing in another. But how do the modalities interact in the specific domain of object perception? This paper distinguishes and analyzes two kinds of multisensory interaction in object perception. First, the modalities may bind features to a single object or event. Second, the modalities (...)
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  19. Object perception.Roberto Casati - 2015 - In Mohan Matthen (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Perception. New York, NY: Oxford University Press UK.
     
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  20. Emergent features, attention, and object perception.Anne Treisman & R. Paterson - 1984 - J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 10 (1):12-31.
  21.  28
    Interpolation processes in object perception: Reply to Anderson (2007).Philip J. Kellman, Patrick Garrigan, Thomas F. Shipley & Brian P. Keane - 2007 - Psychological Review 114 (2):488-502.
  22.  20
    1Q Object Perception.Elizabeth S. Spelke - 1993 - In Alvin I. Goldman (ed.), Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science. Cambridge: MIT Press. pp. 447.
  23.  6
    A Defence of Genuine Open Intersubjectivity in Object Perception.Abootaleb Safdari - forthcoming - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology:1-17.
    The thesis of open intersubjectivity (OI) is that the other is present in our perceptual experience of objects without any concrete encounter. The main goal of this paper is to provide a modified version of this thesis that meets two conditions at the same time: first, preserves the main insight of OI, namely the structural presence of the other in the act of object perception; and second, prevents challenges to the strong version proposed by Zahavi. To that end, (...)
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  24. Amodal completion and object perception-the role of visual primitives.Ge Meyer & Lk Prather - 1989 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (6):496-496.
     
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  25.  48
    Evolutionary Constraints on Human Object Perception.E. Koopman Sarah, Z. Mahon Bradford & F. Cantlon Jessica - 2017 - Cognitive Science:2126-2148.
    Language and culture endow humans with access to conceptual information that far exceeds any which could be accessed by a non-human animal. Yet, it is possible that, even without language or specific experiences, non-human animals represent and infer some aspects of similarity relations between objects in the same way as humans. Here, we show that monkeys’ discrimination sensitivity when identifying images of animals is predicted by established measures of semantic similarity derived from human conceptual judgments. We used metrics from computer (...)
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  26. Development of object perception.S. P. Johnson - 2002 - In Lynn Nadel (ed.), Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Macmillan. pp. 3--392.
     
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  27. Exploratory hand movements and object perception.S. Lederman & Rl Klatzky - 1986 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 24 (5):322-322.
  28. Objects for multisensory perception.Casey O’Callaghan - 2016 - Philosophical Studies 173 (5):1269-1289.
    Object perception deploys a suite of perceptual capacities that constrains attention, guides reidentification, subserves recognition, and anchors demonstrative thought. Objects for perception—perceptual objects—are the targets of such capacities. Characterizing perceptual objects for multisensory perception faces two puzzles. First is the diversity of objects across sensory modalities. Second is the unity of multisensory perceptual objects. This paper resolves the puzzles. Objects for perception are structured mereologically complex individuals. Perceptual objects are items that bear perceptible features and (...)
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  29. The direct relational model of object perception.Nicolas J. Bullot - unknown
    This text aims at presenting a general characterization of the act of perceiving a particular object, in a framework in which perception is conceived of as a mental and cognitive faculty having specific functions that other faculties such as imagination and memory do not possess. I introduce the problem of determining the occurrence of singular perception of a physical object, as opposed to the occurrence of other mental states or attitudes. I propose that clarifying this occurrence (...)
     
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  30. The Object View of Perception.Bill Brewer - 2017 - Topoi 36 (2):215-227.
    We perceive a world of mind-independent macroscopic material objects such as stones, tables, trees, and animals. Our experience is the joint upshot of the way these things are and our route through them, along with the various relevant circumstances of perception; and it depends on the normal operation of our perceptual systems. How should we characterise our perceptual experience so as to respect its basis and explain its role in grounding empirical thought and knowledge? I offered an answer to (...)
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  31. 3-d determinants of object perception under occlusion (vol 30, pg 443, 1992).J. Monterosso - 1993 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 31 (1):85-85.
     
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  32.  30
    A formal theory of feature binding in object perception.F. Gregory Ashby, William Prinzmetal, Richard Ivry & W. Todd Maddox - 1996 - Psychological Review 103 (1):165-192.
  33.  47
    Expertise increases the functional overlap between face and object perception.Thomas J. McKeeff, Rankin W. McGugin, Frank Tong & Isabel Gauthier - 2010 - Cognition 117 (3):355-360.
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  34. Modality-specific and amodal aspects of object perception in infancy.Es Spelke, A. Streri, Ga Vandewalle & E. Rameix - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (6):468-468.
     
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  35. Perception, Causation, and Objectivity.Johannes Roessler, Hemdat Lerman & Naomi Eilan (eds.) - 2011 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Perceptual experience, that paradigm of subjectivity, constitutes our most immediate and fundamental access to the objective world. At least, this would seem to be so if commonsense realism is correct — if perceptual experience is (in general) an immediate awareness of mind-independent objects, and a source of direct knowledge of what such objects are like. Commonsense realism raises many questions. First, can we be more precise about its commitments? Does it entail any particular conception of the nature of perceptual experience (...)
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  36.  31
    Intuition in the context of object perception: Intuitive gestalt judgments rest on the unconscious activation of semantic representations.Annette Bolte & Thomas Goschke - 2008 - Cognition 108 (3):608-616.
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  37. Interpolation processes in visual object perception-evidence for a discontinuity theory.P. J. Kellman & T. F. Shipley - 1987 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 25 (5):334-334.
  38. Understanding the object.Property Structure in Terms of Negation: An Introduction to Hegelian Logic & Metaphysics in the Perception Chapter - 2019 - In Robert Brandom (ed.), A Spirit of Trust: A Reading of Hegel’s _phenomenology_. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
     
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  39.  23
    Spallanzani's Unpublished Experiments on the Sensory Basis of Object Perception in Bats.Sven Dijkgraaf - 1960 - Isis 51 (1):9-20.
  40.  55
    Response to Wolfe: feature-binding and object perception.Vincent Di Lollo - 2012 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 16 (6):308-309.
  41. Self-knowledge and "inner sense": Lecture I: The object perception model.Sydney Shoemaker - 1994 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 54 (2):249-269.
    Two kinds of epistemological sceptical paradox are reviewed and a shared assumption, that warrant to accept a proposition has to be the same thing as having evidence for its truth, is noted. 'Entitlement', as used here, denotes a kind of rational warrant that counterexemplifies that identification. The paper pursues the thought that there are various kinds of entitlement and explores the possibility that the sceptical paradoxes might receive a uniform solution if entitlement can be made to reach sufficiently far. Three (...)
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  42. Getting Objects for Free (Or Not): The Philosophy and Psychology of Object Perception.Gary Hatfield - 2009 - In Gary Carl Hatfield (ed.), Perception and cognition: essays in the philosophy of psychology. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 212-255.
  43. Moral perception and the causal objection.Justin P. McBrayer - 2010 - Ratio 23 (3):291-307.
    One of the primary motivations behind moral anti-realism is a deep-rooted scepticism about moral knowledge. Moral realists attempt counter this worry by sketching a plausible moral epistemology. One of the most radical proposals in the recent literature is that we know moral facts by perception – we can literally see that an action is wrong, etc. A serious objection to moral perception is the causal objection. It is widely conceded that perception requires a causal connection between the (...)
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  44.  28
    Modality-specific and amodal aspects of object perception in infancy: The case of active touch.Arlette Streri, Elizabeth Spelke & E. Rameix - 1993 - Cognition 47 (3):251-279.
  45.  47
    Three functions of motor-sensory feedback in object perception.Hans Wallach - 1979 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 (1):84-85.
  46. Material Objects as the Singular Subjects of Multimodal Perception.Mohan Matthen - 2023 - In Aleksandra Mroczko-Wrasowicz & Rick Grush (eds.), Sensory Individuals: Unimodal and Multimodal Perspectives. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 261–275.
    Higher animals need to identify and track material objects because they depend on interactions with them for nutrition, reproduction, and social interaction. This paper investigates the perception of material objects. It argues, first, that material objects are tagged, in all five external senses, as bearers of the features detected by them. This happens through a perceptual process, here entitled Generalized Completion, which creates the appearance of objects that have properties that transcend the activation of sensory receptors. The paper shows, (...)
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  47. Kant on the Object-Dependence of Intuition and Hallucination.Andrew Stephenson - 2015 - Philosophical Quarterly 65 (260):486-508.
    Against a view currently popular in the literature, it is argued that Kant was not a niıve realist about perceptual experience. Naive realism entails that perceptual experience is object-dependent in a very strong sense. In the first half of the paper, I explain what this claim amounts to and I undermine the evidence that has been marshalled in support of attributing it to Kant. In the second half of the paper, I explore in some detail Kant’s account of hallucination (...)
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  48. (1 other version)Perception and Its Objects.Bill Brewer - 2007 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Early modern empiricists thought that the nature of perceptual experience is given by citing the object presented to the mind in that experience. Hallucination and illusion suggest that this requires untenable mind-dependent objects. Current orthodoxy replaces the appeal to direct objects with the claim that perceptual experience is characterized instead by its representational content. This paper argues that the move to content is problematic, and reclaims the early modern empiricist insight as perfectly consistent, even in cases of illusion, with (...)
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  49. The perception of features and objects.Anne Treisman - 1993 - In A. D. Baddeley & Lawrence Weiskrantz (eds.), Attention: Selection, Awareness, and Control. Oxford University Press. pp. 5-35.
  50. Perceptual Modes of Presentation as Object Files.Gabriel Siegel - 2024 - Erkenntnis 89 (6):2377 - 2395.
    Some have defended a Fregean view of perceptual content. On this view, the constituents of perceptual contents are Fregean modes of presentation (MOPs). In this paper, I propose that perceptual MOPs are best understood in terms of object files. Object files are episodic representations that store perceptual information about objects. This information is updated when sensory conditions change. On the proposed view, when a subject perceptually represents some object a under two distinct MOPs, then the subject initiates (...)
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