Bruno Breitmeyer, Professor of Psychology at the University of Houston, studied mathematics at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, and received his Ph D in experimental psychology from Stanford University. Over the past four decades his research has focused on the spatiotemporal dynamics of visual perception. He is an internationally acknowledged expert in the areas of visual masking and nonconscious visual processing.
"Breitmeyer's Blindspots: The Many Ways We Cannot See is more than
a book about deficits--it is also about vision itself, how it works
and what it does for us. Visual processes are described accurately
but at a level everyone can understand, always thrown into relief
by real cases of visual deficits. Patients who see normally except
that they cannot perceive color, or resolve motion, or recognize
faces, or lack any of a dozen other aspects of vision,
show us how complex the process really is, and how many separable
pieces of neurological machinery contribute to what seems like a
unified sense of seeing."
--Bruce Bridgeman, Professor of Psychology and Psychobiology,
University of California, Santa Cruz
"In this book, rich in facts, anecdotes and illustrations, Bruno
Breitmeyer explores vision in its literal as well as metaphoric
senses and spans the field of visual cognition and beyond, pointing
out how our everyday takes of the world in which we live are prone
to perceptual, cognitive, cultural and personal blind spots. I read
the amazing Blindspots in a single sitting."
--Michael Herzog, Professor of Psychophysics, Brain Mind Institute,
École Polytechnique Féderalé de Lausanne
"From blindness due to diseases of the eye to blindspots due to
cultural influences on visual perception, Breitmeyer weaves a
fascinating story about how sensation, dreams, imagery, bias and
emotion contribute to everyday perception and cognition. He brings
vision sciences alive by referring to real life perceptual events,
whether owing to the sudden appearance of something we did not
expect or to changes from brain damage that create visual holes
in
perception. The journey interweaves philosophical, artistic and
scientific accounts of the many ways we do and do not see."
--Lynn C. Robertson, Professor of Psychology, University of
California, Berkeley
"Bruno Breitmeyer is one of the world's leading vision scientists,
and in this book he takes readers on an eye-opening journey through
the visual system. If you have ever wondered what causes blindness,
why eyes work the way they do, or why we often see so little of
what's around us, this is your book."
--Daniel J. Simons, Department of Psychology and Beckman Institute,
University of Illinois
"This slim volume is a heavyweight that comes along on nimble feet.
It covers an enormous terrain, showing us on every page the worlds
out there of which we are not aware. The overarching theme, the
understanding of vision and perception from its varied deficits,
ranges over the topics of attention, agnosias, imagination,
language, thinking and art. Brilliantly written, enlightening and
inspiring, richly illustrated and spiced with the author's own
personal
flair, this book is bound to be an instant classic. Breitmeyer has
poured a life's worth of knowledge into it, at times reaching back
into the far past. If ever there is a book that spells the death
knell
to naive realism, this is it. The book is heartily recommended to
vision researchers, neuropsychologists, philosophers, and artists,
who will be fascinated to learn how much we are missing in our
daily environment and yet how well we get around."
--Lothar Spillmann, University Hospital, Neurozentrum, Freiburg,
Germany
Ask a Question About this Product More... |