Dorothea Jameson
#36,237
Most Influential Person Now
American neuropsychologist
Dorothea Jameson's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Dorothea Jamesonpsychology Degrees
Psychology
#1310
World Rank
#1605
Historical Rank
#762
USA Rank
Behavioral Neuroscience
#42
World Rank
#43
Historical Rank
#6
USA Rank
Cognitive Psychology
#421
World Rank
#435
Historical Rank
#104
USA Rank
Dorothea Jamesonbiology Degrees
Biology
#5725
World Rank
#8272
Historical Rank
#1928
USA Rank
Neuroscience
#1474
World Rank
#1525
Historical Rank
#245
USA Rank
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Psychology Biology
Dorothea Jameson's Degrees
- PhD Neuropsychology University of California, Berkeley
Why Is Dorothea Jameson Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Dorothea Jameson was an American cognitive psychologist who greatly contributed to the field of color and vision. Biography Jameson was born in Newton, Massachusetts. She went to Wellesley College. She elected psychology as her major in her first year because she was "intrigued that freshmen required special permission to enroll". She graduated in 1942. While at Welleseley she volunteered as a research assistant at Harvard, where she met her future husband, Leo Hurvich. They married in 1948.
Dorothea Jameson's Published Works
Published Works
- An opponent-process theory of color vision. (1957) (978)
- Mach bands : quantitative studies on neural networks in the retina (1966) (578)
- Some Quantitative Aspects of an Opponent-Colors Theory. I. Chromatic Responses and Spectral Saturation (1955) (373)
- Some quantitative aspects of an opponent-colors theory. II. Brightness, saturation, and hue in normal and dichromatic vision. (1955) (366)
- Theory of brightness and color contrast in human vision. (1964) (261)
- Essay concerning color constancy. (1989) (259)
- Complexities of perceived brightness. (1961) (206)
- Opponent chromatic induction: experimental evaluation and theoretical account. (1961) (166)
- The perception of brightness and darkness (1970) (159)
- Perceived color and its dependence on focal, surrounding, and preceding stimulus variables. (1959) (157)
- Handbook of Sensory Physiology, Vol. 7/4, Visual Psychophysics (1973) (123)
- The experimental determination of unique green in the spectrum (1968) (82)
- Opponent-Response Functions Related to Measured Cone Photopigments* (1968) (76)
- Some quantitative aspects of an opponent-colors theory. IV. A psychological color specification system. (1956) (75)
- Some quantitative aspects of an opponent-colors theory. III. Changes in brightness, saturation, and hue with chromatic adaptation. (1956) (59)
- Receptoral and postreceptoral visual processes in recovery from chromatic adaptation. (1979) (55)
- Color Adaptation: Sensitivity, Contrast, After-images (1972) (55)
- Dichromatic color language: "reds" and "greens" don't look alike but their colors do. (1978) (54)
- The binocular fusion of yellow in relation to color theories. (1951) (54)
- Opponent processes as a model of neural organization. (1974) (48)
- From Contrast to Assimilation: In Art and in the Eye (1975) (45)
- A psychophysical study of white. I. Neutral adaptation. (1951) (44)
- Handbook of Perception. Vol. 1, Historical and Philosophical Roots of Perception (1975) (42)
- Theoretical analysis of anomalous trichromatic color vision. (1956) (38)
- Temporal sensitivities related to color theory. (1984) (34)
- Spectral sensitivity of the fovea. I. Neutral adaptation. (1953) (33)
- Note on factors influencing the relation between stereoscopic acuity and observation distance. (1959) (33)
- Theoretical Issues of Color Vision (1972) (32)
- Opponent-Colours Theory in the Light of Physiological Findings (1985) (31)
- IBM products for persons with disabilities (1989) (25)
- A psychophysical study of white. III. Adaptation as variant. (1951) (25)
- Perceived Color, Induction Effects, and Opponent-Response Mechanisms (1960) (24)
- Spectral sensitivity of the fovea. II. Dependence on chromatic adaptation. (1953) (23)
- Use of spectral hue-invariant loci for the specification of white stimuli. (1951) (22)
- Fixation-light bias: an unwanted by-product of fixation control. (1967) (22)
- Spectral sensitivity of the fovea. III. Heterochromatic brightness and chromatic adaptation. (1954) (17)
- A psychophysical study of white. II. Neutral adaptation; area and duration as variants. (1951) (14)
- Does anomalous color vision imply color weakness? (1964) (13)
- Some Misunderstandings about Color Perception, Color Mixture and Color Measurement (1983) (12)
- Improvable, yes; insoluble, no: A reply to Flock (1970) (8)
- Human color perception. An essay review. (1969) (8)
- A quantitative theoretical account of color vision. (1955) (7)
- Green vision and binocular fusion of yellow. (1952) (7)
- Helmholtz and the Three-Color Theory: An Historical Note (1949) (7)
- On criteria for assessing type of colour vision in animals. (1968) (5)
- Color vision and color coding. (1970) (4)
- Color theory and abnormal red-green vision (2004) (4)
- Good lighting for people at work in reading rooms and offices (1947) (4)
- Evaluation of single pigment shifts in anomalous color vision. (1974) (3)
- Levels of Adaptation and Brightness Changes During Color Adaptation. (1949) (3)
- Gunnar Svaetichin: man of vision. (1982) (2)
- Hans-Lukas Teuber: August 7, 1916-January 4, 1977. (1987) (2)
- Intermittent illumination and color vision testing. (1974) (1)
- Visual Psychophysics (1972) (1)
- Color in the hands of the artist and eyes of the beholder (1989) (1)
- Helmholtz's Vision: Looking Backward. (1979) (1)
- Binocular Fusion of Colors (1960) (0)
- Shutoff Pulse Illusion. (1959) (0)
- Binocular Fusion of Colors. (1960) (0)
- Surface Color Perception. Jacob Beck. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y., 1972. xvi, 206 pp., illus. $11.50 (1974) (0)
- Vision: A Spectrum of Topics. (1967) (0)
- Comment on “Saturation estimates and chromatic adaptation” by Gerald H. Jacobs (1968) (0)
- Sensory Psychology: Surface Color Perception . Jacob Beck. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y., 1972. xvi, 206 pp., illus. $11.50 (1974) (0)
- Letter: Color plates, gray plates and intermittent illumination. (1974) (0)
- Response : Green Vision and Binocular Fusion of Yellow (1952) (0)
- Distinguished Scientific Contribution Awards for 1977 (1973) (0)
- Leo M. Hurvich and Dorothea Jameson. (1989) (0)
- Influences of size, shape, retinal locus, and field structure on perceived color (A) (1979) (0)
- Color plates. gray plates and intermittent illumination (1974) (0)
- Handbook of Perception. Vol. 3, Biology of Perceptual Systems (1974) (0)
- Seeing: By Art and by Design (1985) (0)
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