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  • Broschiertes Buch

'Seeing Objects' provides a novel neurophilosophical theory of the structure and nature of visual object representation, and of mental representation in general. The book compares psychological and neurophysiological accounts on how our visual system creates coherent representations of objects with philosophical accounts of the structure of higher-level cognition. By integrating accounts of visual binding operations with philosophical theories of mental representation, 'Seeing Objects' provides a sustained empirical argument that the visual system, like higher-cognitive systems, is systematic…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'Seeing Objects' provides a novel neurophilosophical theory of the structure and nature of visual object representation, and of mental representation in general. The book compares psychological and neurophysiological accounts on how our visual system creates coherent representations of objects with philosophical accounts of the structure of higher-level cognition. By integrating accounts of visual binding operations with philosophical theories of mental representation, 'Seeing Objects' provides a sustained empirical argument that the visual system, like higher-cognitive systems, is systematic and deploys non-conceptual representations with a compositional structure. Moreover, by considering the structural similarities between visual and thought representations, the book establishes a new theoretical basis for studies into the nature of the relation and interaction between perception and higher-order cognition, a timely research topic in Cognitive Science.
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Autorenporträt
Michela C. Tacca holds a M.A. in Philosophy and a Ph.D. in Cognitive Science from the University of Siena. During her Ph.D. she spent a period as a visiting student at the Center for Cognitive Science and Department of Philosophy at Rutgers University. She is currently a post-doctoral fellow at the Department of Philosophy, University of Düsseldorf, where she works within the DFG funded project 'Neuroframes: Neuronale Grundlagen von Funktionalbegriffen'.