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Chapitre d'ouvrage: ID no. (ISBN etc.):  0-8058-3408-7 Clé de citation BibTeX:  Hummel2000
Hummel, J. E. (2000). Where view-based theories break down: The role of structure in human shape perception and object recognition. In E. Dietrich & A. B. Markman (Eds.), Cognitive dynamics: Conceptual and representational change in humans and machines. (pp. 157–185). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo 2008-01-21 14:59:03    Dernièrement modifiée par: Sterenn Audo 2008-01-30 17:00:14
 B  
Catégories: Analogie, Full text
Auteurs: Dietrich, Hummel, Markman
Editeur: Erlbaum (Hillsdale, NJ)
Collection: Cognitive dynamics: Conceptual and representational change in humans and machines.

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Popularité:  28.34%

 
Résumé
(from the chapter) In the object recognition community, recent years have seen the growth of a movement based on the idea that visual object recognition is mediated by the activation of template-like views. This chapter reviews the evidence and motivation for the view-based account of object representation, describes in detail the nature of this account, and discusses its logical and empirical limitations. The author argues that view-based theory is fundamentally and irreparably flawed as an account of human shape perception and object recognition. The author then presents the most plausible and common objections to his own arguments and responds to each. Finally, the author relates view-based theories of object recognition to other models based on formally similar types of knowledge representation and concludes with a discussion of why such accounts must necessarily fail as an account of human perception and cognition. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved)
Ajoutée par: Sterenn Audo    Dernièrement modifiée par: Sterenn Audo

 
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