BELA JULESZ

From: Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society | Date: December 1, 2005| Author: Papathomas, Thomas V | Copyright information

19 FEBRUARY 1928 * 31 DECEMBER 2003

BELA JULESZ selected the famous adage by Horace, Non omnis moriar (Not all of me shall die), as the epigraph to the prologue he wrote for the re-publication of his classic book Foundations of Cyclopean Perception, only a few weeks before he died on 31 December 2003.

With the passing of Bela Julesz, professor emeritus of psychology at Rutgers University, the society of researchers in visual perception and, more generally, in cognitive science h...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

(book reviews)
The Review of Metaphysics ; Focus Series. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1993. xiii + 182 pp. Cloth, $44.00; paper, $14.95--In this exceptionally lucid book, Goldman deploys an enviable knowledge of the cognitive science literature in order to make a sustained but highly readable case for the conclusion that findings in
Case to launch undergrad major in study of human mind.(Special Report)
Crain's Cleveland Business ; Byline: SHARON N. SCHNALL Type in the search phrase cognitive science'' on the employment web site Monster.com, and discover opportunities with NATO, eBay Inc., Xerox Corp. and Lockheed Martin Corp. Candidates who've studied cognitive science shouldn't be difficult to find, but if you're in the
BELA JULESZ
Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society ; 19 FEBRUARY 1928 * 31 DECEMBER 2003 BELA JULESZ selected the famous adage by Horace, Non omnis moriar (Not all of me shall die), as the epigraph to the prologue he wrote for the re-publication of his classic book Foundations of Cyclopean Perception, only a few weeks before he died on 31 December
Brave New Mind: A Thoughtful Inquiry into the Nature of Mental Life
Canadian Psychology ; PETER DODWELL Brave New Mind: A Thoughtful Inquiry into the Nature Of Mental Life New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, 262 pages (ISBN 0-19-508905-7, C$56.00, Hardcover) Reviewed by LEENDERT P. MOS The author poses the major question for cognitive science: "Can mental life be exhaustively
The Mind in Therapy: Cognitive Science for Practice
Canadian Psychology ; ... psychotherapy regardless of one's theoretical orientation. Why the authors chose to demonstrate specifically how cognitive science maps on to extant psychodynamic principles is not clear. They argue that "cognitive theory has been of special benefit to psychodynamic ...
`Use cognitive science to make inroads in education'
New Straits Times ; `Use cognitive science to make inroads in education' Edition: Main/Lifestyle; 2* Section: Nation KUCHING, Tues. - Information and communications technology experts and educationists can join forces to formulate recommendations using cognitive science to accelerate the development process
Cognitive Science, Literature, and the Arts: A Guide for Humanists.(Book Review)
College Literature ; Hogan, Patrick Colm. 2003. Cognitive Science, Literature, and the Arts: A Guide for Humanists. London and New York: Routledge. $85.00 hc. $19.95 sc. 244 pp. The cognitive revolution that has affected so many areas of contemporary thought is currently capturing literary studies as part of its
Cognitive Science Society picks Wiley-Blackwell to publish two journals.(News Bytes)(Brief article)
Information Today ; Wiley-Blackwell has teamed up with the Cognitive Science Society to publish the Cognitive Science journal and create the topiCS: Topics in Cognitive Science journal. They both seek to unite researchers from a broad range of fields who aim to understand the nature of the human mind. Source:
THE MIND AND ITS STORIES: NARRATIVE UNIVERSALS AND HUMAN EMOTION/COGNITIVE SCIENCE, LITERATURE, AND THE ARTS: A GUIDE FOR HUMANITIES
Comparative Literature ; THE MIND AND ITS STORIES: NARRATIVE UNIVERSALS AND HUMAN EMOTION. By Patrick Colm Hogan. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003. xii, 302 p. COGNITIVE SCIENCE, LITERATURE, AND THE ARTS: A GUIDE FOR HUMANITIES. By Patrick Colm Hogan. New York: Routledge, 2003. 244 p. Tectonic shifts are
(book review)
Argumentation and Advocacy ; Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought. By George Lakoff and Mark Johnson. New York: Basic Books, 1999; PP. xiv + 624; $20.00. George Lakoff and his collaborators have made substantial contributions to our understanding of rhetoric, argumentation, and