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Contributors
by Kara D. Federmeier, Diane M. Beck
Knowledge and Vision
Cover image
Title page
Table of Contents
Copyright
Contributors
Chapter One: Memorability: How what we see influences what we remember
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Memorability as an intrinsic stimulus attribute
3 Memorability in relation to other stimulus attributes and cognitive phenomena
4 The neurological bases of memorability
5 Applications and future directions
6 Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Chapter Two: Scaling up visual attention and visual working memory to the real world
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Visual attention
3 Visual working memory
4 Conclusion
Chapter Three: Neural dynamics of visual and semantic object processing
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Architecture of object recognition
3 The need for dynamic models
4 Modeling visual and semantic representations of objects
5 A dynamic account of object recognition
6 Flexibility of meaning
7 Concluding statement
Chapter Four: Visual narratives and the mind: Comprehension, cognition, and learning
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Comprehending visual narratives
3 Domain-specificity and generality in visual narrative processing
4 Development of visual narrative comprehension
5 Conclusions
Chapter Five: How does learning and memory shape perceptual development in infancy?
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Feed-forward/bottom-up models of perceptual development
3 Challenges to an exclusively bottom-up model
4 A feedback/top-down model of perceptual development
5 Comparison to related models
6 Moving forward
7 Conclusion
Chapter Six: The information content of scene categories
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 What is a category?
3 What makes a scene a member of its category?
4 Do observers use category labels in visual processing?
5 What work is being done by the category label?
6 Conclusions
Chapter Seven: What do neurons really want? The role of semantics in cortical representations
Abstract
1 Assumptions and definitions
2 Neuronal responses in visual cortex, the classical view
3 Computational models of ventral visual cortex
4 Category-selective responses do not imply semantic encoding
5 What are the preferred stimuli for visual neurons?
6 Models versus real brains
7 In search of abstraction in the brain
8 Semantics and the least common sense
9 Data availability
Chapter Eight: Past experience and meaning affect object detection: A hierarchical Bayesian approach
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Background: Past experience is a prior for figure assignment
3 Competition within a hierarchical Bayesian model
4 Interim summary
5 Beyond shape: Object detection entails access to meaning
6 How high is high?
7 Conclusion
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Chapter One: Memorability: How what we see influences what we remember
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