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An Outline of Psychology

Duke University Press (1896)

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  1. Comparable context effects exist in physical, physiological, and psychophysical scales.Gerald S. Wasserman - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):764-766.
  • Contextual effects in animal psychophysics: Comparative perception.Viktor Sarris - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):763-764.
  • Psychophysics: The failure of an elementaristic dream.Sverker Runeson - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):761-763.
  • The relative novelty of judgement relativity.Csaba Pléh - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):760-761.
  • Toward a theory of the empirical tracking of individuals: Cognitive flexibility and the functions of attention in integrated tracking.Nicolas J. Bullot - 2009 - Philosophical Psychology 22 (3):353-387.
    How do humans manage to keep track of a gradually changing object or person as the same persisting individual despite the fact that the extraction of information about this individual must often rely on heterogeneous information sources and heterogeneous tracking methods? The article introduces the Empirical Tracking of Individuals theory to address this problem. This theory proposes an analysis of the concept of integrated tracking, which refers to the capacity to acquire, store, and update information about the identity and location (...)
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  • Psychophysical measures of objects and their features: It is time for a change.Gregory R. Lockhead - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):766-772.
  • Empathy in Translation: Movement and Image in the Psychological Laboratory.Susan Lanzoni - 2012 - Science in Context 25 (3):301-327.
    ArgumentThe new English term “empathy” was translated from the GermanEinfühlungin the first decade of the twentieth century by the psychologists James Ward at the University of Cambridge and Edward B. Titchener at Cornell. At Titchener's American laboratory, “empathy” was not a matter of understanding other minds, but rather a projection of imagined bodily movements and accompanying feelings into an object, a meaning that drew from its rich nineteenth-century aesthetic heritage. This rendering of “empathy” borrowed kinaesthetic meanings from German sources, but (...)
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  • Recognition of objects by physical attributes.D. A. Booth - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):759-760.
    [Comment, pp 759-780] Lockhead (1992) [Target Article] is undoubtedly right to attack so-called intensity scaling or the estimation of subjective magnitudes as an invalid perversion of tasks requiring quantitative judgments of aspects of objects, stuffs, and situations. He goes too far, however, in claiming that feature scales do not exist... ... A perceived physical pattern (sensory feature or channel) and the cognitive process that integrates it with its context are characterized by determining to which particular combination of specified stimulus patterns (...)
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  • Is there any difference between attribute- and object-based psychophysics?Jüri Allik - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):757-759.