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Stephen Grossberg

Boston University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    66
    • Most Recent
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    31

 More details
  • Boston University
    Regular Faculty
Homepage
Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  • All publications (66)
  •  64
    Cortical dynamics of contextually cued attentive visual learning and search: Spatial and object evidence accumulation
    with Tsung-Ren Huang
    Psychological Review 117 (4): 1080-1112. 2010.
    Aspects of Consciousness
  •  68
    Human and computer rules and representations are not equivalent
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (1): 136-138. 1980.
    Philosophy of Cognitive SciencePhilosophy of Artificial Intelligence
  •  66
    The Art of Seeing and Painting
    Technical Report. 2006.
    The human urge to represent the three-dimensional world using two-dimensional pictorial representations dates back at least to Paleolithic times. Artists from ancient to modern times have struggled to understand how a few contours or color patches on a flat surface can induce mental representations of a three-dimensional scene. This article summarizes some of the recent breakthroughs in scientifically understanding how the brain sees that shed light on these struggles. These breakthroughs i…Read more
    The human urge to represent the three-dimensional world using two-dimensional pictorial representations dates back at least to Paleolithic times. Artists from ancient to modern times have struggled to understand how a few contours or color patches on a flat surface can induce mental representations of a three-dimensional scene. This article summarizes some of the recent breakthroughs in scientifically understanding how the brain sees that shed light on these struggles. These breakthroughs illustrate how various artists have intuitively understand paradoxical properties about how the brain sees, and have used that understanding to create great art. These paradoxical properties arise from how the brain forms the units of conscious visual perception; namely, representations of threedimensional boundaries and surfaces. Boundaries and surfaces are computed in parallel cortical processing streams that obey computationally complementary properties. These streams interact at multiple levels to overcome their complementary weaknesses and to transform their complementary properties into consistent percepts. The article describes how properties of complementary consistency have guided the creation of many great works of art.
    NeuroscienceDepictionPainting and DrawingAesthetic Perception
  •  105
    Competitive Learning: From Interactive Activation to Adaptive Resonance
    Cognitive Science 11 (1): 23-63. 1987.
  •  61
    Processing of expected and unexpected events during conditioning and attention: A psychophysiological theory
    Psychological Review 89 (5): 529-572. 1982.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  •  80
    Binocular fusion and invariant category learning due to predictive remapping during scanning of a depthful scene with eye movements
    with Karthik Srinivasan and Arash Yazdanbakhsh
    Frontiers in Psychology 5. 2014.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
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