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(1994) Human and machine vision, Dordrecht, Springer.
New wine in old barrels
knowing how to move tells us how to perceive movement
Paolo Viviani
pp. 181-197
Trained as an electrical engineer, I first approached the work of James Gibson in the late sixties, by reading his second major book "The senses considered as perceptual systems"1. Those were the years when the extravagant hopes raised by Information Theory as a possible clue for understanding sensory processing, and the equally extravagant hopes raised by Cybernetics as a possible clue for understanding action were being exposed for what they are, just extravagant and misleading. Yet, in many quarters the notion that the connection between perception and action had to be construed as some form of algorithmic symbolic transformation implemented by dedicated hardware was still quite popular.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4899-1004-2_13
Full citation:
Viviani, P. (1994)., New wine in old barrels: knowing how to move tells us how to perceive movement, in V. Cantoni (ed.), Human and machine vision, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 181-197.