Introduction
Part I. Perceptual grouping and segmentation
Chapter1: What birds see and what they don't
William Hodos
Part II. Luminance, contrast, and spatial and temporal
resolution
Chapter 2: Color vision in fish and other vertebrates
Christa Neumeyer
Chapter 3: Grouping and early visual processing in avian vision
Robert Cook and Carl Erick Hagmann
Chapter 4: Figure-ground segregation and object-based attention in
birds
Olga Lazareva and Edward Wasserman
Chapter 5: Neurobiological foundations of figure-ground segregation
in primates
Hans Supér
Chapter 6: Illusory perception in animals: Observations and
interpretations
Edward Wasserman
Chapter 7: Amodal completion and illusory perception in birds and
primates
Kazuo Fujita, Noriyuki Nakamura, Ayumi Sakai, Sota Watanabe, &
Tomokazu Ushitani
Chapter 8: Neurobiology of perception of illusory contours in
animals
Andreas Nieder
Part III. Object perception and object recognition
Chapter 9: How jumping spiders see the world
Duane P Harland, Daiqin Li and Robert R Jackson
Chapter 10: Visual discrimination by the honeybee (Apis
mellifera)
Adrian Horridge
Chapter 11: Recognition by components: A birds' eye view
Edward A. Wasserman and Irving Biederman
Chapter 12: Birds' perception of depth and objects in pictures
Marcia L. Spetch and Ronald G. Weisman
Chapter 13: The recognition of rotated objects in animals
Jessie J. Peissig and Tamara Goode
Chapter 14: Neural mechanisms of object recognition in non-human
primates
Rufin Vogels
Part IV. Motion perception
Chapter 15: Avian visual processing of motion and objects
Robert G. Cook and Matthew S. Murphy
Chapter 16: Neural mechanisms underlying visual motion detection in
birds
Douglas R.W. Wylie and Andrew N. Iwaniuk
Chapter 17: Primate motion perception
Bart Krekelberg
Part V. Visual attention
Chapter 18: Primate visual attention: How studies of monkeys have
shaped theories of selective visual processing
Pierre Pouget, Jason Arita and Geoffrey F. Woodman
Chapter 19: Selective and divided attention in pigeons
Tom Zentall
Chapter 20: Visual cognition in baboons: Attention to the global
and local stimulus properties
Joel Fagot
Part VI. Different dimensions of visual perception
Chapter 21: Circadian visual system of mammals
Lawrence P. Morin
Part VII. Evolution of visual system
Chapter 22: Evolution of the brain in vertebrates: Overview
Ann B. Butler
Chapter 23: Evolution of the vertebrate eye
James K Bowmaker
Chapter 24: The avian visual system: Overview
Toru Shimizu and Shigeru Watanabe
Chapter 25: Development of the visual system in birds and
mammals
Hans-Joachim Bischof
Chapter 26: Brain asymmetry in vertebrates
Onur Güntürkün
Postscript: Shaun Vecera
Index
Olga F. Lazareva is Assistant Professor of Psychology at Drake
University. Her research concentrates on behavioral and
neurobiological aspects of visual perception and relational
learning in humans and nonhuman animals.
Toru Shimizu is Professor of Psychology at the University of South
Florida. His areas of research include the neural basis of vision
and cognition in animals.
Edward A. Wasserman is Dewey B. and Velma P. Stuit Professor of
Experimental Psychology at the University of Iowa and coeditor with
Thomas Zentall of Comparative Cognition: Experimental Explorations
of Animal Intelligence (Oxford University Press, 2006). He is a
member of the Delta Center at the University of Iowa, dedicated to
the investigation of learning, development, and change. Wasserman's
research has centered on learning, memory, cognition, and
perception in humans and nonhuman animals.
"This is a serious book covering a complicated but fascinating
topic. I recommend it for the serious reader, whether researcher,
teacher, or student, who wants to know more about how animals see
the world in all of the ways that seeing can be defined. This is a
book that would certainly merit a spot on the bookshelf of
comparative and evolutionary psychologists as well as behavioral
and evolutionary biologists, as there is much in here to appreciate
for each of
these groups." -- Michael J. Beran, PsycCRITIQUES
"This deep yet fascinating book is not quite what it seems from the
title. Rather than "How Animals See the World," it should be
"Visual Psychophysics of Birds and Primates." Ninety-eight percent
of animals are invertebrates, and 85 percent of habitable space is
aquatic; both are little represented here, though the salticid
spiders and honeybees make an interesting contrast to vertebrate
vision... The final section, on evolution of the vertebrate
visual
system's structures and basic physiology, belongs first as a
foundation. Nevertheless, the book is fascinating reading for the
specialist in perception and the cognitive neuroscientist, though
not the
beginner. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students and
researchers/faculty." -- J. A. Mather, University of Lethbridge,
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