Transcription of Infant Visual Perception - kellmanlab.psych.ucla.edu
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109 CHAPTER 3 Infant Visual PerceptionPHILIP J. KELLMAN and MARTHA E. ARTERBERRYTH EORIES OF PERCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT110 The Constructivist View110 The Ecological View112 The Contemporary Situation in Perceptual Theory113 BASIC Visual SENSITIVITIES IN INFANCY114 Visual Acuity114 Contrast Sensitivity116 Orientation Sensitivity119 Pattern Discrimination119 Color Vision120 Motion Perception124 SPACE PERCEPTION126 Kinematic Information127 Stereoscopic Depth Perception129 Pictorial Depth Perception131 OBJECT PERCEPTION134 Multiple Tasks in Object Perception134 Edge Detection and Edge Classification135 Detection and Classification of Contour Junctions136 Boundary Assignment137 Perception of Object Unity137 Perception of Three-Dimensional Form142 Perception of Size145 FACE PERCEPTION146 Preference for Facelike Stimuli146 Perceiving Information about People through Faces148 Mechanisms of Face Perception149 CONCLUSION150 Levels of Analysis150 Hardwiringversus
perception was standard empiricist (e.g., Piaget, 1952, 1954). He did place greater emphasis on action, rather. 110 Infant Visual Perception than mere sensory associations, as the means by which meaningful reality emerges from initially meaningless sensations.
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