Available:*
Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | 30000010321262 | QP431 B59 2012 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
On Order
Summary
Summary
An understanding of the senses - vision, hearing, touch, chemical and other non-human senses - is important not only for many fields of biology but also in applied areas such as human computer interaction, robotics and computer games. Using information theory as a unifying framework, this is a wide-ranging survey of sensory systems, covering all known senses. The book draws on three unifying principles to examine senses: the Nyquist sampling theorem; Shannon's information theory; and the creation of different streams of information to subserve different tasks. This framework is used to discuss the fascinating role of sensory adaptation in the context of environment and lifestyle. Providing a fundamental grounding in sensory perception, the book then demonstrates how this knowledge can be applied to the design of human-computer interfaces and virtual environments. It is an ideal resource for both graduate and undergraduate students of biology, engineering (robotics) and computer science.
Table of Contents
Preface |
1 Introduction |
2 Information theory |
3 Fourier analysis |
4 Hearing |
5 Vision: making and recording the image |
6 Vision: capturing motion |
7 Vision: colour |
8 Vision and hearing: position in space |
9 Touch |
10 Olfaction and taste |
11 Balance and other senses |
12 Synchronisation and conciousness |
13 Appendix: basic statistical concepts |
Index |