The nature of the visual field, a phenomenological analysis

Publication date

2015-10-15

Authors

Koenderink, Jan BISNI 0000000365833575
van Doorn, Andrea J.ISNI 000000038704944X
Wagemans, Johan

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Abstract The visual field is the spatial form of visual awareness, that is, immediate visual experience ignoring qualities and meanings. Such an entity only exists in the discursive representation, for the awareness as such is quality and meaning throughout. Thus the discursive, formal treatment is necessarily limited. We identify a number of important distinctions of a geometrical nature. This description is confronted with experimental phenomenology, that is the psychology of the Gestalt Schools, and with well known principles of artistic practice. We also trace the connections with biology, especially ethology, aesthetics, and the field of cognitive science based upon Cassirer's concept of symbolic forms.

Keywords

Gestalt, Perception, Psychogenesis, Symbolic forms, Visual awareness, Visual field, Taverne, Software, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Signal Processing

Citation

Koenderink, J, van Doorn, A J & Wagemans, J 2015, 'The nature of the visual field, a phenomenological analysis', Pattern Recognition Letters, vol. 64, pp. 71-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.patrec.2015.02.003