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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Feature and conjunction information from brief visual displays

Grabowecky, Marcia F. January 1987 (has links)
The feature integration theory of object perception (Treisman & Gelade, 1980) suggests that the perception of multidimensional stimuli requires that attention be serially directed to the items in a visual display in order to correctly conjoin features into objects, while the perception of features does not require serial attention. Under conditions in which the serial focusing of attention is disrupted by reducing display duration, available information about conjunctions of two features should not exceed the independent information available about the constituent features. Three experiments using a partial report paradigm employing a location cue were conducted in order to test this prediction. Subjects viewed colored letter displays that varied in cue-display stimulus onset asynchrony. The dependent measure was accuracy of response. Results suggest that a small amount of information from a separate representation of conjunctions of features may be accessible. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
2

Objectivity and sensitivity in aesthetics

Rudinow, Joel January 1974 (has links)
This essay is a discussion of two related topics in contemporary aesthetics: the notion of aesthetic sensitivity, and the question of the objectivity of aesthetic judgements. Its point of departure is the work of Frank Sibley on "aesthetic concepts". In Chapter I intuitionism is rejected both as providing an answer to the question, "Are aesthetic judgements objective?" and as providing the basis for an account of aesthetic sensitivity. In Chapter II an account of aesthetic sensitivity based on the seeing-as notion is explored and ultimately abandoned. In Chapter III the issue of objectivity for aesthetic judgements is developed in detail, as turning on the availability of some decision procedure or other for the resolution of disputes. It is argued that relativism, the position that no such decision procedures for aesthetic judgements are available, cannot be adequately defended. An analogy between aesthetic judgement and color attribution emerges as basic to a promising strategy for a defense of aesthetic objectivism. The strategy involves the demand for an articulation of decision procedures relevant to color attribution. The promise of the strategy is defended when it is argued that standard anti-intuitionist criticisms need not undermine it. Finally, the theses and arguments of one relativist, Isabel C. Hungerland, are criticized. Part of her defense of relativism is traced to her acceptance of an analogy between aesthetic judgement and seeing-as. The results of Chapter II, in which the limits of that analogy are exposed, are employed against her. Chapter IV is an outline of a set of decision procedures for color attribution. Color decision procedures involve the selection of a reference group of observers, whose visual experiences are taken to be authoritative. Members of the reference group are selected on the basis of two principles of selection: one which selects statistically normal observers, and one which selects observers of demonstrably higher discriminatory capacity. A system of subsidiary principles, which operates when the two main are at odds in their selections, is illustrated. In Chapter V the plausibility of an aesthetic analogue of the theory of color objectivity developed in Chapter IV is defended against two major objections. The first objection is based on a point of disanalogy between colors and aesthetic features: the V-emergence" of aesthetic features, It is argued, in effect, that this is not a relevant point of disanalogy. The second objection is based on the view that the meanings of terms used to express aesthetic judgements are never twice the same. This view is criticized, and a more plausible one, which does not pose difficulties for the colors/aesthetics analogy, is considered. / Arts, Faculty of / Philosophy, Department of / Graduate
3

Complex color stimuli and emotional responses

Rasmussen, Per Gorm 11 1900 (has links)
The primary purpose of the present study was to examine the larger issue of color and emotional responses and, within that framework, to explore ways of specifying complex color displays. Several steps were involved in this investigation. First, a total of 80 color displays representing five levels of hue, two levels of value, two levels of chroma and four levels of motif were constructed. These were unique in that they accurately and systematically sampled the Munsell color space, and in the fact that they contained large numbers of color elements which were colorimetrically specifiable and which at the same time were arranged in such a way that they resembled color pictures. They thus bridged the gap between stimuli used in single color experiments which could be colorimetrically specified, and experiments with unspecifiable color pictures. Secondly, an emotional response measure employing the three dimensions of pleasure, arousal and dominance, was used to assess the effects of the display dimensions of hue, value, chroma and motif and the subject variable of sex. In addition, a verbal measure of information rate was used to assess the extent to which the display motifs influenced subjects' non-affective (i.e., cognitive responses), and subjects' ability to recognize the display motifs was assessed as well. Thirdly, the problem of stimulus specification was approached through the application of a three-step procedure involving increasing stimulus specificity. These approaches dealt with the specification in terms of (1) the individual color elements making up a display, (2) the quantity of these individual color components, and (3) the distribution or location of these elements across the display surface. The latter specification scheme, which was termed "distribution specification", made use of 24 procedures—some based on accepted artistic views and others of a more abstract nature—for calculating the relationship between the color elements in the displays. The measures which these procedures resulted in were subseqently assessed against subjects' responses on the dimensions of pleasure, arousal, dominance and information rate. Initially, a pilot study with 20 subjects and 16 of the 80 displays was conducted to test the general performance of the response measures and to test whether the displays could be presented in the form of projected slides. The results of this study showed that the general experimental procedure was acceptable but that the projection technique distorted the colors of the displays excessively. Based on the conclusions of the pilot study, a larger study using 82 subjects and the displays as originally constructed was conducted. The results were surprising to the extent that complex color stimuli did not differevery substantially from those elicited by single color stimuli: the color dimension of value influenced the emotional responses to the greatest extent, chroma to a somewhat lesser extent, and hue very little. The motif of the displays, on the other hand, was found to make a substantial difference to the way subjects felt about a display, and the way they assessed it in terms of information rate. Also, it was found that the verbal measure of information rate was a good predictor of how well subjects would recognize a motif. The results of the analysis of stimulus specification in terms of the 24 distribution measures was particularly interesting and gratifying in that several of the measures emerged as strong predictors of responses to the emotional measures and information rate. In particular, the artistically common-sense notions of top-bottom and left-right pictorial balance were prominent, as was the specially constructed measure of contrasts within small sampling areas of the displays. It was concluded, first, that the study had reinforced the findings of many past studies dealing with color and affect, and that it had thrown some new light on some of the controversial and contradictory findings of the past. Secondly, the study had moved the investigation of emotional responses to color pictures and works of art a substantial step closer to realization. Finally, the study had suggested new and promising avenues to follow in the further investigation of colorimetric specification of complex color stimuli. / Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies / Interdisciplinary - Psychology, Education, Architecture / Graduate
4

Chromatic and achromatic perception: a comparison between the first and third grade levels

Smitheran, Joyce Carol Knox, 1944- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
5

Stimulus determinants of color harmony

Stripling, Ruth Emily Fehr, 1921- January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
6

Color coding of controls; RT improvement found when monochromatic labels were replaced by polychromatic labels

Cheney, Warren D. January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
7

Color preferences and color usage of lower-class Negro three-and-four-year-old children

Brunson, Kathryn Carter, 1945- January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
8

Achromatic and chromatic dream patterns as related to the use of color on the Rorschach Inkblot Test

Leman, John E. January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
9

Differences in color preferences with cultural background

Reddy, Thota Veernath January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
10

Lamps for lighting people

Chao, Anne Rong January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries

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