Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.

Recent electrophysiological studies of visual mechanisms in frogs have demonstrated that a high degree of selection of specific information occurs right at the retinal level (Barlow, 1953a and 1953b; Lettvin et al., 1959; Maturans et al., 1960). This research has important theoretical implications f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Biersner, Robert. J.
Other Authors: Melzack, R. (Supervisor)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: McGill University 1964
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=115361
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.1153612014-02-13T04:10:02ZApproach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.Biersner, Robert. J.Psychology.Recent electrophysiological studies of visual mechanisms in frogs have demonstrated that a high degree of selection of specific information occurs right at the retinal level (Barlow, 1953a and 1953b; Lettvin et al., 1959; Maturans et al., 1960). This research has important theoretical implications for the behavioral sciences, but there have been few systematic laboratory studies of the effects of specific visual stimuli on amphibian behavior. It has long been assumed that the retina transduces visual information into nerve impulse patterns, and that a faithful replica of the visual world is transmitted to the brain, where all information processing is believed to occur. Physiological studies of retinal processes have shown that the mechanisms are not as simple as this.McGill UniversityMelzack, R. (Supervisor)1964Electronic Thesis or Dissertationapplication/pdfenalephsysno: NNNNNNNNNTheses scanned by McGill Library.All items in eScholarship@McGill are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.Master of Arts. (Department of Psychology.) http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=115361
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology.
spellingShingle Psychology.
Biersner, Robert. J.
Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
description Recent electrophysiological studies of visual mechanisms in frogs have demonstrated that a high degree of selection of specific information occurs right at the retinal level (Barlow, 1953a and 1953b; Lettvin et al., 1959; Maturans et al., 1960). This research has important theoretical implications for the behavioral sciences, but there have been few systematic laboratory studies of the effects of specific visual stimuli on amphibian behavior. It has long been assumed that the retina transduces visual information into nerve impulse patterns, and that a faithful replica of the visual world is transmitted to the brain, where all information processing is believed to occur. Physiological studies of retinal processes have shown that the mechanisms are not as simple as this.
author2 Melzack, R. (Supervisor)
author_facet Melzack, R. (Supervisor)
Biersner, Robert. J.
author Biersner, Robert. J.
author_sort Biersner, Robert. J.
title Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
title_short Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
title_full Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
title_fullStr Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
title_full_unstemmed Approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
title_sort approach and avoidance responses in the frog to varying dimensions of visual stimuli.
publisher McGill University
publishDate 1964
url http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=115361
work_keys_str_mv AT biersnerrobertj approachandavoidanceresponsesinthefrogtovaryingdimensionsofvisualstimuli
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