Visual Perception from a Computer Graphics Perspective
William Thompson author Roland Fleming author Sarah Creem-Regehr author Jeanine Kelly Stefanucci author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:30th Sep '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£120.00(9781568814650)
This book provides an introduction to human visual perception suitable for readers studying or working in the fields of computer graphics and visualization, cognitive science, and visual neuroscience. It focuses on how computer graphics images are generated, rather than solely on the organization of the visual system itself; therefore, the text provides a more direct tie between image generation and the resulting perceptual phenomena. It covers such topics as the perception of material properties, illumination, the perception of pictorial space, image statistics, perception and action, and spatial cognition.
This is a fabulous book written by the right people, and if I had to pick only three books for my desk, this would be one of them.
—Peter Shirley, author of Fundamentals of Computer Graphics
This is the first book on perception to build on the need to understand how images are formed in order to understand how they are perceived and used. The discussions of applications to computer graphics are the icing on the cake of a broad and often deep treatment of the ever-growing science of human visual perception.
—Daniel Kersten, Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota
Finally, here is a book that offers a thorough introduction to visual perception specifically geared toward the graphics practitioner. It should be required reading for anyone serious about computer graphics.
—Alexei A. Efros, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
It matches basic vision texts in coverage and adds the unique point of view of production: how would you create this scene? It is an excellent resource and new source of ideas about how vision works and how computer graphics can best take advantage of the properties of the human visual system.
—Patrick Cavanagh, Université Paris Descartes and Harvard University
ISBN: 9780367659288
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 1020g
550 pages