MARTY BANKS AND JOHANNES BURGE, VISUAL SPACE PERCEPTION LABORATORY, UC, BERKELEY
We use several sources of sensory information when estimating properties of the environment. For example, the eyes and hands both provide relevant information concerning an object's shape. The eyes estimate shape using binocular disparity (differences in the images to the two eyes) and pictorial cues (also used by painters). The hands supply shape information by means of tactile and proprioceptive cues. How does the brain combine these inputs to make sense of the environment? We explore this and related questions via experimentation and mathematical models.
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Posted by bayleyw at October 10, 2007 11:22 AM