Views: 13375
Submissions: 79
Favs: 4075
Digital Artist | Registered: September 30, 2007 05:01:24 PM
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
[All works are digital (Corel Painter + tablet), unless stated otherwise.]
Contact: capreolusATlavabitDOTcom
[All works are digital (Corel Painter + tablet), unless stated otherwise.]
Contact: capreolusATlavabitDOTcom
Featured Submission
Stats
Comments Earned: 1377
Comments Made: 1554
Journals: 7
Comments Made: 1554
Journals: 7
Recent Journal
M. A. Changizi (theoretical neurosceince and vision) (G)
18 years ago
Right about time for another wise-ass journal...
I was browsing Typophile forums a while back when I came across a link to this Dr. Mark A. Changizi's page of research papers.
It's full of fascinating reads and interestign ideas. And they make sense. Some of my picks:
A new function for binocular vision, and the evolution of forward-facing eyes
"Here we describe new research suggesting that the degree of binocular convergence is selected to maximize how much the animal can see in its environment. Animals in non-cluttery environments can see the most around them with panoramic, laterally directed eyes. Animals in cluttery environments, however, can see best when their eyes face forward, for binocularity has the power of "seeing through" clutter out in the world."
Bare skin, blood, emotion, and the evolution of primate color vision
Why letters are shaped the way they are
"The Structures of Letters and Symbols throughout Human History Are Selected to Match Those Found in Objects in Natural Scenes"
Patterns across writing systems, and what it tells us about visual recognition
Latency correction and a general theory of illusions
"Perceiving-the-present is the theoretical framework positing that the function of the visual system is to generate percepts representative not of the scene that generated the proximal stimulus, but of the scene that will be present at the time the percept actually occurs about 100 msec later, thereby compensating for the neural delay."
Ultimate computational limits on learning
"Natural notions of "learning with error" are introduced, and the ultimate computational limits of learning studied in light of the new notions."
Writers might be interested in these articles concerning language:
Vagueness of natural language (and another one)
The economical organization of the lexicon
I also found Complexity Digest, which looks well worth digging through.
I was browsing Typophile forums a while back when I came across a link to this Dr. Mark A. Changizi's page of research papers.
It's full of fascinating reads and interestign ideas. And they make sense. Some of my picks:
A new function for binocular vision, and the evolution of forward-facing eyes
"Here we describe new research suggesting that the degree of binocular convergence is selected to maximize how much the animal can see in its environment. Animals in non-cluttery environments can see the most around them with panoramic, laterally directed eyes. Animals in cluttery environments, however, can see best when their eyes face forward, for binocularity has the power of "seeing through" clutter out in the world."
Bare skin, blood, emotion, and the evolution of primate color vision
Why letters are shaped the way they are
"The Structures of Letters and Symbols throughout Human History Are Selected to Match Those Found in Objects in Natural Scenes"
Patterns across writing systems, and what it tells us about visual recognition
Latency correction and a general theory of illusions
"Perceiving-the-present is the theoretical framework positing that the function of the visual system is to generate percepts representative not of the scene that generated the proximal stimulus, but of the scene that will be present at the time the percept actually occurs about 100 msec later, thereby compensating for the neural delay."
Ultimate computational limits on learning
"Natural notions of "learning with error" are introduced, and the ultimate computational limits of learning studied in light of the new notions."
Writers might be interested in these articles concerning language:
Vagueness of natural language (and another one)
The economical organization of the lexicon
I also found Complexity Digest, which looks well worth digging through.
User Profile
Accepting Trades
No Accepting Commissions
No Character Species
Gaeabionta
Favorite Music
classic, post-rock & avant-garde
Favorite TV Shows & Movies
'Before flying back to the earth', 'Zoo', 'Helvetica', 'Les Triplettes de Bellevile', 'RRRrrrr!', 'Persepolis', 'The way things go'
Favorite Animals
roe deer
Favorite Quote
Fail, fail again, fail better.
Favorite Artists
Franz Marc, Jean Tinguely, Rembrandt, Goya, O.Redon, K.Kollwitz, M.Vroubel, Beksinski, David O'Reilly, Phil Hale, Chris Goodwin, Andy Goldsworthy
Contact Information
FA+
I hope you have a geat day and thank you for your support!