Description
Cambridge University Press Spatial Vision in Humans and Robots by Laurence Harris and Michael Jenkin
Spatial vision is that field of science which deals with the problem of inferring the structure of the world from vision. This problem can be divided into many separate tasks, such as extracting information about three-dimensional objects, or object recognition. This book is a collection of invited papers presented at the 1991 York Conference on Spatial Vision in Humans and Robots. From computational models to explicit biological models of spatial processing, to neural networks, these papers bring together the biological and computational aspects of spatial image processing in a unique way. The book provides a snapshot of the state of the art in the understanding of spatial vision. This collection will be of interest to biological researchers investigating how the brain solves spatial problems, as well as to researchers in robotics and computer vision systems.show more