附註:Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Perspectives on colour space / Jan J. Koenderink and Andrea J. Van Doorn -- Light adaptation, contrast adaptation, and human colour vision / Michael A. Webster -- Contrast colours / Michael A. Webster -- Colour and the processing of chromatic information / Michael D'Zmura -- The pleistochrome: optimal opponent codes for natural colours / Donald I.A. MacLeod and T. Von der Twer -- Objectivity and subjectivity revisited: colour as a psychobiological property / Gary Hatfield -- A computational analysis of colour constancy / Donald I.A. MacLeod and Jurgen Golz -- Backgrounds and illuminants: the yin and yang of colour constancy / Richard O. Brown -- Surface colour perception and environmental constraints / Laurence T. Maloney -- Colour constancy: developing empirical tests of computational models / David H. Brainard, James M. Kraft, and Philippe Longere -- The illuminant estimation hypothesis and surface colour perception / Laurence T. Maloney and Joong Nam Yang -- The interaction of colour and motion / Donald D. Hoffman -- "Colour" as part of the format of different perceptual primitives: the dual coding of colour / Rainer Mausfeld -- The importance of errors in perception / Alan Gilchrist -- Avoiding errors about error / Robert Schwartz -- The place of colour in nature / Brian P. McLaughlin.
摘要:"The last few decades have brought fascinating changes in the way that we think abut 'colour' and the role 'colour' plays in our perceptual architecture. In Colour perception: Mind and the physical world, leading scholars from cognitive psychology, philosophy, neurophysiology, and computational vision provide an overview of the contemporary developments in our understanding of colours and of the relationship between the 'mental' and the 'physical'. With each chapter followed by critical commentaries, the volume presents a lively and accessible picture of the intellectual traditions that have shaped research into colour perception." "Written in a non-technical style and accessible to an interdisciplinary audience, the book will provide an invaluable resource for researchers in colour perception and the cognitive sciences."--Jacket