Brief
Seminar Title | 106/04/27 TMU Research Center of Brain and Consciousness Seminar:Chaz Firestone (Department of Psychological and Brain Science, Johns Hopkins University)- Seeing stability: Physical understanding is rooted in automatic visual processin |
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Start Date | 2017-04-27 10:00:00 |
End Date | 2017-04-27 12:00:00 |
Introduction | Topic: Seeing stability: Physical understanding is rooted in automatic visual processing Speaker: Chaz Firestone (Department of Psychological and Brain Science, Johns Hopkins University Date: 2017.04.27 (Thu.) 10:00-12:00 Location: Boardroom, 15F United Medical Building (Back Building) ,TMU Abstract: Among our most impressive intellectual achievements is the ability to interpret the world in terms of underlying, unobservable physical forces. This physical understanding has historically been considered a paradigmatic case of sophisticated higher-level reasoning; however, this seems contrary to our everyday successes intuiting how objects will balance, slide, fall, bend or break. Here I will explore the possibility that such inferences (e.g. whether a tower of blocks will topple) are rooted in automatic visual processing, suggesting that appreciating how physical scenes will unfold works less like proving a theorem, and more like seeing color. I will report new evidence that physical scene understanding is fast, automatic, attention-grabbing, and so vivid that it can even create illusory motion — causing observers to see static precarious towers as actively falling. We can not only *think about* physical forces, but also *see* them. |
Contact Email | consciousbrain@tmu.edu.tw |
Reference link | http://consciousbrain.tmu.edu.tw/?action=news_in&nid=1196 |
Sign-up Date | 2017-04-11 00:00:00 |
Sign-up Deadline | 2017-04-27 10:00:00 |
Seat Limit | 20 |
Signee Date | 6 |
Attached file | talk2 |