Table of Contents 1968 – 1969
- Psychophysical Hypothesis for Stationary Edge Perception
- A Survey of the Types of So-called Eye-hand Coordination with the Aim of Describing the Kinds of Optical Feedback that Control the Kinds of Manipulation
- The Analysis of Spatio-Temporal Organization
- The Concept of the Stimulus. A Revised Formulation of the Alternatives
- Consistency vs. Discrepancy of Stimulus Information
- The Contrast Between Physical Motions and Optical Motions
- Wave-Train Information and Wave-Front Information in Sound and Light, with a Note on Ecological Optics
- Memo on Motion (for Seminar on Ecological Optics)
- The Perception of Surface Layout: A Classification of Types
- The Puzzle of the Retinal Image
- On the Difference between Perception and Proprioception
- The Construction of Meaning vs. the Detection of Meaning
- Note on the Directness of Perception
- “Information” in Visual Theory
- A List of Ecologically Valid Meanings in a Stationary Ambient Optic Array
- A Reconsideration of Eye-Movements and Eye Postures Based on Ecological Optics
- A Course of Readings for Graduate Students Interested in Advanced Work in Perception
- A Further Note on Occlusion
- The Theory of Images Transmitted to the Brain
- Homogeneous Optical Stimulation and its Implications for Visual Perception
- Heterogeneous Optical Stimulation and Visual Perception
- Three Kinds of Equivocal Information in Line Drawings
- Psychology 511 “The Image”
- Does the Ability to Visualize Depend on Visual Images?
- The Psychology of Representation
- Reversible Perspective and Reversed Motion
- A Suggested Classification of the Types and Subtypes of Graphic Action
- The Perception of a Permanent World
- Tentative Outline of a History of the Concept of Image
- Transparency and Occlusion or How Bishop Berkeley Went Wrong in the First Place
- “Structural Meanings” in Early Utterances