Description
Ecological Psychology represents a fundamental shift in understanding how living organisms perceive and interact with their environments. Rather than viewing perception as a purely internal mental process, this approach emphasizes the direct pickup of meaningful information from the environment.
This Element provides a comprehensive introduction to ecological psychology, tracing its origins in James J. Gibson’s groundbreaking work and exploring contemporary developments in the field. The authors examine key concepts including affordances, invariants, and the role of embodied action in perception. The framework demonstrates how organisms actively explore their surroundings to extract crucial information for survival and adaptation.
The volume addresses critical debates within perception science and offers insights into how ecological principles apply across diverse domains, from animal behavior to human cognition and robotics. It serves as an accessible gateway to understanding perception not as passive reception but as dynamic engagement with environmental structure.







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.