vrijdag 16 december 2011

Van de Cruys & Wagemans - iPerception Putting reward in art: A tentative prediction error account of visual art

 

Kanaal: i-Perception
Gepost op: donderdag 15 december 2011 17:12
Auteur: Pion
Onderwerp: Putting reward in art: A tentative prediction error account of visual art

 

The predictive coding model is increasingly and fruitfully used to explain a wide range of findings in perception. Here we discuss the potential of this model in explaining the mechanisms underlying aesthetic experiences. Traditionally art appreciation has been associated with concepts such as harmony, perceptual fluency, and the so-called good Gestalt. We observe that more often than not great artworks blatantly violate these characteristics. Using the concept of prediction error from the predictive coding approach, we attempt to resolve this contradiction. We argue that artists often destroy predictions that they have first carefully built up in their viewers, and thus highlight the importance of negative affect in aesthetic experience. However, the viewer often succeeds in recovering the predictable pattern, sometimes on a different level. The ensuing rewarding effect is derived from this transition from a state of uncertainty to a state of increased predictability. We illustrate our account with several example paintings and with a discussion of art movements and individual differences in preference. On a more fundamental level, our theorizing leads us to consider the affective implications of prediction confirmation and violation. We compare our proposal to other influential theories on aesthetics and explore its advantages and limitations.


Artikel weergeven...

woensdag 14 december 2011

GERT website

Check our updated GERT website:

 

http://www.gestaltrevision.be/gert

 

It has the new GERT release and an updated manual.

It now also contains a nice “example stimuli” section (just follow the link).

 

Feel free to spread the word.

 

(thanks to Rudy for the smooth implementation)

vrijdag 9 december 2011

Prof. dr. Raymond van Ee bijzonder hoogleraar Entrepreneurship and innovatio...

 
 

Sent to you by Frouke via Google Reader:

 
 

via Persberichten on 12/9/11

De heer prof. dr. Raymond van Ee is met ingang van 1 november 2011 benoemd tot bijzonder hoogleraar Entrepreneurship and innovation in life sciences aan de Faculteit Natuurwetenschappen, Wiskunde en Informatica van de Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen.

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

woensdag 7 december 2011

Google Scholar Citations Open To All

Google has made it easy to track your publications and help others to do so. (Thanks Bart M for pointing this out)

 
 

Naudojant „Google Reader" atsiųsta jums nuo Jonas:

 
 

per Google Scholar Blog autorius Anurag 11.11.16

A few months ago, we introduced a limited release of Google Scholar Citations, a simple way for authors to compute their citation metrics and track them over time. Today, we're delighted to make this service available to everyone! Click here and follow the instructions to get started.

Here's how it works. You can quickly identify which articles are yours, by selecting one or more groups of articles that are computed statistically. Then, we collect citations to your articles, graph them over time, and compute your citation metrics - the widely used h-index; the i-10 index, which is simply the number of articles with at least ten citations; and, of course, the total number of citations to your articles. Each metric is computed over all citations and also over citations in articles published in the last five years.

Your citation metrics will update automatically as we find new citations to your articles on the web. You can also set up automated updates for the list of your articles, or you can choose to review the suggested updates. And you can, of course, manually update your profile by adding missing articles, fixing bibliographic errors, and merging duplicate entries.

As one would expect, you can search for profiles of colleagues, co-authors, or other researchers using their name, affiliation, or areas of interest, e.g., researchers at US universities or researchers interested in genomics. You can add links to your co-authors, if they already have a profile, or you can invite them to create one.

You can also make your profile public, e.g., Alex Verstak, Anurag Acharya. If you choose to make your profile public, it can appear in Google Scholar search results when someone searches for your name, e.g., [alex verstak]. This will make it easier for your colleagues worldwide to follow your work.

We would like to thank the participants in the limited release of Scholar Citations for their detailed feedback. They were generous with their time and patient with an early version. Their feedback greatly helped us improve the service. The key challenge was to make profile maintenance as hands-free as possible for those of you who prefer the convenience of automated updates, while providing as much flexibility as possible for those who prefer to curate their profile themselves.

Here is hoping that Google Scholar Citations will help researchers everywhere view and track the worldwide influence of their own and their colleagues' work.

Posted by: James Connor, Software Engineer

 
 

Veiksmai, kuriuos dabar galite atlikti:

 
 

maandag 5 december 2011

living books

A great collection of 'living books', some of them on cognitive science and a particularly interesting one on open science:

http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/


Cheers,
Sander