Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 14-15Department of Archaeology, 1997 - Archaeology |
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Page 99
... visual field are unlikely to be perceived in any detail and so will be represented weakly if at all in the mental map . The perception of depth is achieved using a number of possible environmental cues such as texture gradient ...
... visual field are unlikely to be perceived in any detail and so will be represented weakly if at all in the mental map . The perception of depth is achieved using a number of possible environmental cues such as texture gradient ...
Page 100
... visual field . When confronted with a new visual stimulus the associative memory acts as a store of traces with which to compare the new stimulus . A process of pattern recognition is then initiated to match the stimulus with a closest ...
... visual field . When confronted with a new visual stimulus the associative memory acts as a store of traces with which to compare the new stimulus . A process of pattern recognition is then initiated to match the stimulus with a closest ...
Page 103
... visual processing system of the hunters was adapted to respond to and recognise animals . An important feature of the visual recognition system is that of transformational invariance , the ability to recognise three dimensional objects ...
... visual processing system of the hunters was adapted to respond to and recognise animals . An important feature of the visual recognition system is that of transformational invariance , the ability to recognise three dimensional objects ...
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