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Cognition

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Title: Cognition


1
Cognition The Visual Arts
Dr. Thomas Shaffer Psychology 492 South Dakota
State University
2
Psychology Art
  • Cognition Psychology (the science of the mind) is
    the study of how the mind processes information.
  • The Cognitive Revolution that swept through
    psychology during the second half of the second
    century captured the interest of a generation of
    scientists disenchanted with traditional
    behavioral psychology and psychoanalysis.
  • In the last 50 years Cognitive Psychologists have
    produced an impressive collection of data about
    how humans perceive, process, and store
    information.
  • However, while Cognitive Psychology has made
    spectacular discoveries during the past 50 years,
    art is one of the most glorious of human
    achievements.

3
The Glory of Art Human Existence
  • Decorative arts have graced the lives of people
    throughout the ages.
  • Art is found in some shape or form in all
    cultures!
  • long before psychologists contemplated the basic
    nature of mental existence, or philosophers
    contemplated the meaning of life, prehistoric man
    drew images on cave walls or created primitive
    human figurines.
  • Art is part if human existence and we are part of
    art!
  • Art cognition are indeed two convex mirrors
    each reflecting amplifying the other.

L. Woman From Willendorf, Austria. C.
30,000-25,000 BC. Limestone, 4/12 ins. High. R.
Man from Brno, Czech, Republic, C. 30,000-25,000
BC. Ivory, 8 ins. High
4
Art Mind are one!
  • Mind Art are one, when we create or experience
    art we have a clear experience of what
    philosophers would call mind.
  • That is, we do not see art, we see through
    the minds eye and translate that experience
    into some type of artistic expression.
  • In the platonic tradition, what we experience is
    an interpretation of the world around us, not a
    direct experience.
  • Thus our perceptual world is a highly individual
    unique experience.
  • Thus art is a highly personal and unique
    experience for each human interpreter that can
    differ with each new exposure

Vincent Van Gogh. The Night Café, C. 1880. Oil on
Canvas
5
Cognition the Visual Arts
  • This course is a reflection of what is currently
    known about the nature of human perceptual
    cognitive systems and visual art.
  • It is about the way the eye and mind see,
    understand, and respond to visual art.
  • We will study visual science, visual physiology ,
    the perceptual organization of the visual
    world.
  • We will study the relationship between eye
    movements and art, and the evolution of the
    visual system
  • We will study neurophysiology and how the brain
    organizes and integrates information from all of
    out senses to produce the esthetic experience.
  • We will study how each of us brings to the
    viewing of art his or her own unique experience
    how that experience can change from moment to
    moment

Vassily Kandinsky, Improvisation No. 30, 1913.
Oil on Canvas
6
The Descent of Man
7
The Evolution of Man
  • The evolution of Mankind has occurred over a
    period of at least 4.5 million years
  • Primitive humanoids originally came migrated from
    the African continent, through Europe, and
    eventually into North America.
  • Homo Sapiens, our closest ancestors, first
    appeared on the continent some 40,00 years ago
    following the end of the last interglacial
    period.

8
The Evolution of Homo Sapiens
  • Early Homo Sapiens had larger Brains than
    previous humans, and the climate changes that
    followed the last interglacial period led to a
    significant increase in the food sources
    available to him.
  • This allowed man to thrive, and to develop
    sophisticated social culture, although he
    remained primarily a hunter/gatherer

9
The Beginnings of Primitive Art
Although Humanoids had almost certainly created
decorative art, perhaps as long ago as hundreds
of thousands of years previously, the earliest
know sophisticated art has been found in Europe,
and dates back 25,000 to 30,000 years.
10
Early Primitive Art
  • Themes in the earliest known artistic works
    consist of hunting scenes and the depiction of
    animals.
  • This perhaps is a reflection of mans hunting and
    gathering culture that was dominant at this
    period of time

11
Early Human Art The art of the Hunters
Left section of the Lion Panel, 25,000-17,000 BC.
Pigment on Limestone. Near Chavet, France
12
Early Human Art The art of the Hunters
  • Hyena Panther, C. 25,000-17,000 BC. Pigment on
    Limestone Rock, Chauvet Valley, France

13
Early Human Art The art of the Hunters
  • Bison after 15,000 BC. Modelled Clay, near
    Ariege, France

14
Early Human Art The art of the Hunters
  • Spear Thrower Carved with Leaping Horse, 12,000
    BC, Montastruc France

15
Early Human Art The art of the Hunters
  • Coyote Head, 10,000 BC, Bone, Tequixquiax, Mexico

16
Early Human Art The art of the Hunters
  • Two Giraffes and an Elephant Superimposed, C.
    8000-5000 BC. Rock Engraving, Messak, Libya

17
Early Human Art The Art of the Farmers
Engravings on Rock. C. 8000. Found near Palermo,
Sicily
18
The Art of the Farmers
  • a

Man from Cernavoda, C. 4000-35000 BC. Clay,
Bucharest, Romania
19
The Art of the Farmers
Stonehedge, C. 2100-2000 BC. Salisbury Plain,
Englande
20
The Art of the Farmers
Entrance to Temple, C. 3000-2000 BC. Malta
21
  • a

Goddess in Childbirth, C. 1500 BC, Valley of
Mexico?
22
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25
Visual Perception Structure of the Visual System
26
The evolution of the Mammalian Visual System
  • The human eye has evolved over millions of years
    in order to allow us to see in a 3 dimensional
    world (even though our system encodes a 2
    dimensional image).
  • Vision is an adaptive skill, that is, our
    specific visual system is tuned to the
    environment that we live in.
  • Our visual system is different than creatures
    that live in our world because it is specific to
    our needs.

27
Structures of the human eye
28
Visual receptors in the retinal layer are
connected to bipolar cells which in turn are
connected to ganglion cells. This allows for a
progressive discrimination of visual information
at a very early level in the system.
29
The Retina
  • The earliest Stage of visual processing occurs in
    the Retina
  • The retina contains the visual receptors that
    allow us to transduce stimulus energy from the
    environment into the electro-chemical signals the
    brain can interpret.
  • Transduction is carried out by two types of cells
    in the retina, Rods (Which code for luminance) ,
    and Cones (which code for color).

30
Visual Angle
  • Vision is best within 12 degrees of visual angle
    from center because of the concentration of
    cones in the Fovea.
  • Foveal Vision subtends less than 2 degrees of
    visual angle, parafoveal vision subtends another
    10 degrees of visual angle
  • Near peripheral visual angle subtends the next 60
    degrees of visual angle, and peripheral vision
    constitutes 180 degrees of visual angle

31
Visual Perception Color Perception
32
Light consists of charged electromagnetic
particles moving in waves. The mammalian visual
system is tuned to a certain portion of the light
spectrum.
33
Rods Cones
  • Rods and Cones are the sensory receptor cells of
    the mammalian visual System.
  • Cones allow us to see color there are three
    types, short wave, medium wave, long wave. They
    also allow us to resolve fine detail (visual
    acuity)
  • Cones are found in the fovea or center of the
    retina, there are roughly 7 million.
  • Rods allow us to see in black white, and to see
    lines, angles, and contours.
  • Rods are found outside the fovea. There are
    roughly 100 million of them.

Exterior of a cone
Interior of a Cone
34
Response ranges of the visual receptors
  • Rods Cones have different response ranges
  • This graph represents the overall responses of
    the two types of visual receptors to the visual
    spectrum

35
The maximum responses of the three cones may be
demonstrated on a visual tuning curve
36
Do all people see color the same way?
  • For centuries people have debated the question,
    is one persons subjective experience the same as
    anothers
  • Certainly, the phenomenon of color blindness has
    been of interest since John Dalton, a natural
    scientist and professor of mathematics reported
    in 1790 that his perceptions of color seemed to
    be different that that of others.
  • Dalton believed that the lenses in his eyes was
    possible tinted, differently that other persons
  • He solved the question by willing his eyes post
    humorously to Oxford University

37
Color Blindness
  • Different types of impairment in color vision can
    lead to different appearances of color in the
    visible spectrum

38
Color Blindness
  • The reproductions of a Monet were drawn by 1) a
    person with normal color vision, 2) a person with
    a red green color deficiency, and 3) and person
    with a lesion in the portion of the brain that
    processes color

39
Visual Perception Luminance Perception
40
Luminance
  • Luminance, or what artists refer to as value is
    perceived lightness (brightness)
  • It is defined by how the human visual system
    responds to light
  • In particular, how bright the average human
    judges a light to be
  • Luminance is not a physical measurement, and the
    luminance of any particular number of photons
    varies depending on the wavelength of light, it
    is determined by how sensitive our eyes are to
    that color of light.
  • Understanding luminance is important because out
    perception of depth, three-dimensionality,
    movement, and spatial organization are all
    carried by part of our visual system that
    responds only to luminance differences and is
    insensitive to color

41
Luminosity Response Curve The apparent
brightness of different wavelengths of light in
Daylight
  • A Luminosity Response Curve shows the combined
    responses of the three cone types of light to
    each wavelength.
  • The two arrows show that under daylight
    conditions, a given amount of blue light (450 nm)
    produces about 1/20 the response as the same
    amount of green light.
  • This occurs because our visual systems is less
    sensitive to blue than to green light (the
    spectral luminosity function is lower in the blue
    than in the green spectrum)

42
Luminosity Response Curve Apparent brightness of
different wavelengths (Day vs. Night).
  • Rods, like cones, have a spectral response cure.
  • The response of rods varies both with the amount
    of light and with the wavelength. Rods are much
    more sensitive to luminance than cones
  • You can see on this curve that the rod curve
    peaks closer to the short wavelength end of the
    visual spectrum (e.g. rods peak lower in the blue
    spectrum than the combined cone spectrum, meaning
    the brightest part of the spectrum is different
    for rods).

43
Luminance Art
  • This comparison of Picassos the Tragedy with a
    black white version shows the paintings
    lightness value
  • There is not much difference in these prints,
    this thus reveals how much information is carried
    by luminance alone.

Picasso, The Tragedy (Poor People on the
Seashore), C. 1903
44
Luminance Art
  • Monets Famous Impressionist sunrise (1872.) was
    widely disparaged by critics in Paris.
  • The original version above appears to pulsate.
  • As the black white version indicates the sun is
    exactly the same luminance as the rest of the
    painting.
  • In the third version (right) the sun has been
    made lighter than in the original, but it has now
    lost its luminosity and paradoxically appears
    less bright
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