
Psychology and the Vermont landscape
Although only small parts of a tree canopy can be seen in road puddles, and only small parts of the river are visible through gaps in the wooden slats of a covered bridge, the mind constructs a full image based on the concept of primate vision -- which a researcher applied to Vermont rural landscapes in a recent article. Amodal completion (“seeing” a whole shape when parts of it are covered by something else), anorthoscopic perception (visions that do not directly follow from what is sensed) and spatiotemporal integration (visual persistence; to see something even after it has disappeared) are described through a Vermont lens.
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