Edition |
First edition. |
Description |
xvi, 350 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [297]-329) and index. |
Contents |
Hearing. The sounds of silence ; Perfect pitches, beeping pitches -- Smelling. You smell like dog ; Like Marvin Gaye for your nose -- Tasting. Cold leftovers with a fine North Dakota cabernet -- Touching. Rubber hands and rubber brains ; Touching speech and feeling rainbows -- Seeing. Facing the uncanny valley ; The highest form of flattery -- Multisensory perception. See what I'm saying ; All of the above. |
Summary |
Psychologist and researcher Rosenblum reports on recent advances in perceptual science that provide new insights into how our senses work. To cover the range of our extraordinary perceptual skills, he provides fascinating, concrete examples for each ability. Blind mountain bikers use hearing for guidance, creating clicking sounds with their mouths for navigation via batlike echolocation. "Beep Baseball" for the blind, with its beeping ball and bases, is yet another instance of not only directional skill but also how we "hear" the future with time-to-arrive auditory information. On to smell and the neurological process by which scents shape moods. Commercial applications of almost undetectable "environmental aromas" in casinos have been labeled subliminal manipulations by investigative journalists though aroma experts refute this, saying flowers cannot be accused of manipulation. Blind painters show that painting is more than a visual medium, while our "visual brain" helps us touch. So it goes in this appealing and compelling look at new findings about the powers of our less-conscious brain, the realm of the senses- --Booklist. |
Subject |
Senses and sensation.
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ISBN |
9780393067606 hardcover $26.95 |
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0393067602 hardcover |
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