3
6. Technical and Human Aspects of Photo-Irnrterpretation,
The synthesis of the four foregoing sections Physiology, Psychology,
Performance of Visual Tasks, and Adaptation and Learning is shown in
fig. 5. The space for the time factor was obtained by slightly
rearranging the yellow cards and leaving out the irrelevant "Space and
Movement perception" and the unwanted "Optical Illusions and Pseudo Vision",
Vi of the EYE [|]:
Lh. dq
— — — -
z—3ÓHIWFORMATON|
Soy VISUAL
ACUITY
SENSITIVITY
et 3
POINTING =
ES + HEIGHT m A
"UN | Visual Tasks Perception [E = Zi} Short Long |
HN — [FüsioN Colour f= Tee
]cowraasr |^N Riresulap [THINKING -
limens + | N Stereo erceplion) [21 logicals |=
Mechanisms Ste C= = Associative
tuU eb" ‘se
. wi et
M, m oW. 1
Po DE incon.
BS€RVATION| —
— Recognition -
_— ldentificarion
| Spectral e
“| SENSITIVI
ees s
£319 A FAN À
Von. ART,
viTY HH Pro jection of Ideas
Brain Contvelled | HEXPECTAT/ON
- ee als me at ef em
oe - . — e AE 8
y. Ag wv yb, te, as — — -
PE ale, Sf ee tis
VISION
FIG.5. THE DIAGRAM INTO WHICH THE BASIC AND SECONDARY
PROPERTIES ARE ARRANGED.
Where blue and red meet, there is a relation between
physiology and psychology; e.g. &t the top, where the
mechanical structure (anatomy) is very much connected
with the electrical network (neural chain) and at the
lower corner, where the expectations guide the visual
activities. On the other hand, the left and right
hand corners "Imaging Quality" and "Memory" are
laying far apart; & direct relation is out of question,