Sensory Substitution and Augmentation
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:13th Dec '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Sensory substitution and augmentation devices are built to try to replace or enhance one sense by using another sense. For example, in tactile-vision, stimulation of the skin driven by input to a camera is used to replace the ordinary sense of vision that uses our eyes. The feelSpace belt aims to give people a magnetic sense of direction using vibrotactile stimulation driven by a digital compass. Fiona Macpherson brings together researchers -neuroscientists, psychologists and philosophers -who are developing these technologies, studying the minds and behaviour of subjects who use them. Sensory Substitution and Augmentation has three specific aims. The first is to present the latest empirical research on sensory substitution and augmentation. Second, philosophers and scientists who adopt a very different approach comment on the empirical work. Their commentaries are often critical of the assumptions of the work, but often they make and call for clarifications, suggest extensions to the work, or comment on features of the application of the work that the original authors do not. This is one reason why Sensory Substitution and Augmentation is more than simply a collection of papers on the same topic. Finally, philosophers look at the nature of sensory substitution and augmentation, tackling issues such as the nature and limitations of sensory substitution, the nature of the sensory experiences, theories of perception, and the potential for these devices to help those people with disabilities, in part due to future amendments of the devices that are suggested. Throughout, there is a particular focus on the nature of the perceptual experiences, the sensory interactions, and the changes that take place in the mind and brain over time that occur while using and training to use these technologies.
The late Paul Bach-y-Rita is generally accredited for developing the ?rst electronic sensory substitution device (SSD) in the 1960s. This was the tactile visual sensory substitution device (TVSS) that redirected visual information to the tactile sense. The editor of this book provides a lively and elaborate history of the TVSS and other SSDs and augmentation devices in the Introduction. MacPherson continues with a detailed philosophical account on the nature of the sensory experiences elicited by SSDs. Already in the Introduction, it becomes clear that the book successfully brings together perspectives on SSDs from psychological, neuroscienti?c, and philosophical vantage points. * H. Christiaan Stronks, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, University Medical Center Leiden, Leiden, the Netherlands, Perception *
ISBN: 9780197266441
Dimensions: 241mm x 164mm x 24mm
Weight: 838g
300 pages