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Abstract
ABSTRACT 2
Table of contents
Abstract p.2
Research p.6
Research into practice
Proposals p.22
Three objects of ambiguity,
Discussion p.26
What could I have done differently?, Unanticipated consequences? Exhibition
Acknowledgements p.32
References p.33
Appendix 1
Interpretations of reality. 01:20 min film by Jens Löfgren.
Appendix 2
Constructing with the kit.
TABLE OF CONTENTS 3
Points of departure
Why
When I sense a prejudice within me, I try to ask myself why do I feel that way? Have
I made generalising assumptions based upon my insufficient knowledge, or have I
perhaps been influenced by someone else’s prejudices? Either way I believe that by
exposing ourselves to multiple realities we not only learn more, we also diminish our
generalisations within that field.
Grewal, 2011
Aim
What I hope to achieve is to stimulate new views and experiences, thereby broaden the
understanding of our perception and the reality we so often take for granted. With new
views and experiences I hope to diminish generalisations and let my designs initiate
conversations on how we perceive and experience our reality.
Inspiration
Since my bachelor degree on sense-to-sense interpretations, I have considered our
perception to be not only essential to our understanding of the world, but also
extremely fascinating. When I for the first time read a passage from Marcel Proust’s
In search of lost time I was struck by his interesting observations of everyday life. The
author also made it clear to me how strong the link between memories and perception
is (Proust, 1993 p.54). It was that connection between perception and memories or
experiences that became my way of exploring the concept of multiple realities.
For whom
As a furniture and product designer I have the possibility to reach people by the
aesthetics of the objects I create. In this project I have been working with aesthetics
and functions in my designs, to stimulate the users with a sense of “newness”
(Markussen, 2013 p.41), insights on perception and the different ways of experiencing
the world.
My proposals are related to the private home but I see the arena of the spring
exhibition as a good venue for observing interactions with the proposals as well as
discussing them and the different realities they evoke. By focusing on the exhibition as
a target instead of the commercial market, I can work with the aesthetics in ways that
strengthen the connection to the concept, in opposite to for example taking
commercial interests in to consideration.
POINTS OF DEPARTURE 4
Clarifications
Affordance
The psychologist James J. Gibson invented the term ”affordance” in his book The
Ecological Approach to Visual Perception to explain his theory that we perceive the
environment in terms of it’s possibilities for action. Don Norman applied this concept in
his book The Design of Everyday Things in which he discuss how “perceived
affordances” cause us to respond intuitively to features of objects and environments
(Fulton Suri, 2005 p.170). I have decided to use this term since it’s in line with the
concept of my third proposal. I use it in connection to Stuart Hall’s theory of
representation (see p.8). I mean that we perceive these affordances and what these
objects mean to us through our previous perceptions and experiences.
Experiences
During this degree work I shifted from talking about memories to start talking about
experiences, since it’s more connected to doing and is quite often subconscious.
Since experiences is a form of memory I feel that it is more accurate to use that word.
Generalisations
Generalisations is a part of our perceptual system, which is essential for us to
understand our perceptual input, where it serves the function as a kind of filter, to
avoid a sensory overload and shorten the time of understanding the sensory input.
Easily put, the brain retrieves information from our memory of similar experiences to
complete the sensory input and ease the understanding of the current situation
(Chekov, 2017).
But I also use the word when talking about social contexts and how generalisations
can develop into prejudices. In those cases our brain takes short cuts to a prejudice,
instead of looking into what it actually is. This is covered in the Introduction.
Haptic
I use the word haptic in different forms in this project, when I do that I refer to the
sense of touch and how we physically interact with objects.
Reality
When I talk about reality or different realities, I refer to the individual experiences that
each of us have. I can agree that there are shared truths in life, as we share one
physical world, but as I see it that don’t conflict the idea of multiple realities. The yoga
master B.K.S. Iyengar said: “There is only one reality, but there are many ways that
reality can be interpreted.” (Iyengar, 2005). However, I prefer to see it as each person
interpret the physical world into their reality.
How I work
I am a designer with a practice ranging from tableware to furniture, spatial projects
and sometimes even architecture, but I work mainly with objects in the private home
and their possibilities. I try to use as few electronic techniques in my designs as
possible, because I want the user to understand how the design works and trigger
thoughts and sensations with the simplicity of the objects and their aesthetics.
POINTS OF DEPARTURE 5
Research
When I started looking into memory and perception I had an loosely based idea on how
we perceive the world. That idea was that when we look at an object, the majority of
what we see is the preconception of what we think we see and that our previous
experiences colour our perception.
In my research phase I took a closer look into perception and memory and how they
are linked. The first evidence I found pointing in that direction was an article from The
Guardian, written by Mo Costandi where he points out the discrepancy between what
we actually see and what we perceive. But also how our visual perception can become
contaminated by other sensory input or previous experiences.
Costandi, 2011
The most striking and clearest explanation I discovered was in a documentary by David
Eagleman called The Brain With David Eagleman. Where he describes the concept of
“The Internal model”, which is based on the theory that what we experience is not really
what is out there, instead he calls it a beautifully rendered simulation. He shows a
hollow mask of Einstein’s face, spinning from a thread. Which seems to stick out even
when it is facing the other way.
“What you are seeing is your internal model. Not the raw information
coming in from your eyes. Your internal model is built on a lifetime of
experience with faces that stick out. When you are confronted with one
that’s hollow, your model simply sees what it expects to see.”
Eagleman, 2015
RESEARCH 6
He describes that first we see coloured dots, dots becomes lines, lines becomes
shapes, shapes becomes objects, objects become scenes and finally scenes becomes
an understandable situation. The generalisation process helps us understand but it
also gives us preconceptions which could lead to prejudice.
I have also read the book The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat by Oliver Sacks,
where Sacks writes about his encounters as a neurologist. In the title chapter he meets
doctor P., a man who appears to function well, has a job and can conversate well, but
suffers from visual agnosia. Which means, if we use Chekov’s ideas on generalisation,
that doctor P’s perception of visual input stops at the shape stage, after which he is in
need of other sensory input. Which led him to try to put his wife on his head believing it
was his hat.
Luis Buñuel
(Sacks, 2007)
Cross-referencing
The input that comes in through our eyes only means something if we can cross-
reference it. For example when babies reach out to touch what’s in front of them, they
are not just learning what an object feels like - they are learning how to see
(Eagleman, 2015). Cross-referencing is more important than what I first anticipated.
William Molyneux posed a thought experiment in late 1600’s. This thought experiment
is referred to as Molyneux’s problem and is phrased: “if a man born blind can feel the
differences between shapes such as spheres and cubes, could he similarly distinguish
those objects by sight if given the ability to see?” To which Molyneux answered that the
sensory experiences have been attained without comparison in this case and
therefore their references become foreign to each other (Molyneux’s problem, 2017).
Molyneux’s problem have recently showed to have some truth to it, because of
advancements in eye surgery, the problem can finally be put to test. For an example,
Mike May lost his sight when he was 3,5 years old and he regained his sight through
surgery after over 40 years of blindness. He did not only had trouble understanding
simple spatial information, he couldn’t even recognise his sons by only seeing them
(Eagleman, 2015).
RESEARCH 7
“This cross-referencing doesn’t stop when we are fully grown, it
continues throughout our lives. What we touch influences how we
see. Taste is affected by our sense of smell. Our sight informs how
we hear. Our senses depend on each other and our reality is built
by comparing these streams of data. When they are woven
together we get our perception of this moment.”
Eagleman, 2015
Unconscious inference
The spatial recognition problems Mike May had was due to the fact that the visual
input had no referential meaning to him. This is what’s called unconscious inference
and is something we learn through experience (Hatfield, 2002). For an adult this are
things we take for granted, such as a ball becoming smaller is moving away from you or
that the speed in which an object falls to the ground indicates how heavy it is.
RESEARCH 8
Design process
Sensory workshop
Quite early on in my project I held a clay-creative workshop with three participants. In
the first part they got to look at an abstract shape for 10 seconds, then they had five
minutes to imitate that shape. In the next part they got to drink a glass of grapefruit
juice with their eyes closed and imitate the flavour in an abstract shape. In the third
part they got to listen to a bassy sound and interpret it into a physical shape (see fig. 1).
In the final part, they were to recreate the first shape from their memory (see fig. 2).
Fig. 1 Participant is interpreting a Fig. 2 Assembly of the four parts of the workshop,
bassy sound. closest 10 seconds imitation, then taste, then audio and
in the back the recreation from their memory.
My idea with this workshop was to see whether I could influence their memory with
other sensory stimuli. I had an idea that the bitter taste and the bassy sound might
evoke more volume to their shapes in the last part. That idea did not work, so first I was
a bit disappointed, but when I analysed it later I saw that the participants had in the
final part recreated how they did in the first part, not accessing their visual memory of
the original, rather their haptic memory of how they built it the first time. What’s even
more interesting is that they recreated in a generalising way. They remembered how
many parts the object consisted of but not how they looked like, they remembered that
Fig. 3 Proportions and the composition were distorted in
the 20 min between the first (left one) and last part (right one).
DESIGN PROCESS 9
they perceived the original to have an S-shape, two horns or a 90 degree angle, but the
proportions were way off (see fig. 3). Which suggests that it was more important to
recognise the category or semantics of the object rather than how it actually looked
like. This is the opposite to a photographic memory where the composition and relation
is prioritised. This was something practical that I could connect with what I’ve read in
my research.
Projecting shadows
Inspired by the Einstein mask mentioned
earlier, I started to think about whether there
are any other universal visual hints that I can
use. Which gave me the idea to do a test to see
whether if I projected a shadow onto a
surface that sticks up, could possibly that
shadow fool the eye in believing it is a hollow?
I created a cylinder shaped lamp with a
bar crossing the centre, thus casting a shadow
across the centre of the light beam (see fig. 4).
Underneath the lamp I placed a disc which had
a crease across the centre. I chose a matte
black colour to eliminate any other shadows
that might guide the eye. The problem with
this test was that it was not clear enough and
it depended on so many factors to work out, Fig. 4 Does the crease stick up or down?
plus I did not find any good use for it.
Fig. 5 What weigh most, the ball of yarn or the flower pot?
Comparing
Inspired by unconscious inference I played around with preconceptions on gravity,
weight and the properties of materials and objects. Using our knowledge on physics
against our perception. In Comparing I used the element of a scale to show the relation
between a ball of yarn and a flower pot (see fig. 5). This was actually a bit funny, but
there were nothing else to it. No apparent second use to it.
DESIGN PROCESS 10
Fig. 6 Is it a clothes hanger or a people hanger?
The Hanger
I started to look at multiple ways of using objects as I explored the constructionist way
of looking at the use of objects. Everything from the hacking of objects to observations
of various use of objects. Eventually I made a short film which I call The Hanger, it is
a split screen film with two persons seeing different qualities or possibilities with the
same object. Quite simple but also quite clear. One person sees the possibility of
hanging clothes the other sees a work out tool (see fig. 6). This were off course never
intended as a proposal but more a way of testing and communicating the concept.
Fig. 7 You can actually blow into your ear with it.
Hearing yourself
I also made an object that was inspired by the vision proposal and it’s ways of
perceiving yourself. I worked with the sensation of hearing your own voice straight into
your ear (see fig. 7). This object was quite funny to play with but it also gave me the idea
of using the body as a resonance box.
DESIGN PROCESS 11
Fig. 8 A variety of instruments were made in the workshop.
adaptations (see fig. 8). The way you could alter the sound by simply sliding it in and out
over the edge gave me some ideas.
Constructionist workshop
According to Hall, constructionists construct meaning by using representational
systems. I thought it would be interesting to put not only that idea to test, but also to
see if our previous experiences affect our way of constructing. So I created a kit of
abstract shapes, objects seemingly with no apparent function except from the light
bulb perhaps. I made the first set in cardboard and set up a workshop to test the idea
(see fig. 9). I wanted to see how people would interact with the parts and which parts
that was most interesting and which were not. I gave the participants free hands to
construct objects out of the parts I had created. The participants enjoyed the session
and my idea of using playfulness as an ingredient to interact seemed to work.
Fig. 9 The participants played and explored the affordances of the parts in the kit.
DESIGN PROCESS 12
Prototyping work
- Concept references
Carsten Höller’s project Upside down goggles led me to learning more about vision
and neural adaptation, which is a change over time in the responsiveness of the
sensory system to a constant stimulus. For example when you lean on a table you first
feel the table but after awhile you become numb for the sensation, you don’t even think
about it anymore. Fast adaptation takes effect and slow adaptation can take minutes,
hours or even days to get used to (Neural Adaption, 2017).
George Stratton a perception interested psychologist from the late 1800’s did a test
where he wore upside down glasses for at least five days continuously. It was first on
that fifth day the images started to appear upright (Ibid.). As a matter of fact our eyes
actually receives the visual input upside down and then our brain flips the image so it
will make sense to us. It is believed that for the first few days, babies see everything
upside-down (Brady, 2017). Stratton’s test showed that our brain creates our own
reality that makes sense to us.
DESIGN PROCESS 13
Fig. 11 Three test persons including myself tested the non-reversal mirror for one week.
- Mirror tests
First I tested the mirror for one week, it is for sure an interesting experience (see fig.
11). The orientation is quite hard and I had some moments when I started to think
about whether I control my hands with vision or with the sense of touch. Because it
was actually almost easier to shave myself with my eyes closed. When I opened them,
it became a conflict between haptics and vision. The memory of how it is supposed to
look like intervenes the actual perception.
I had two other persons testing it, also for one week. They both thought they could
get used to it. Test person B described how she started to use her sense of touch much
more towards the end of the week and sometimes even closed her eyes.
“I saw myself from different angles, the halves of the face looked
different. The features of the face emerged in a new way. It was a
bit new, not uncanny, a new way of looking at yourself. Something
alien, you have always seen yourself in one way and then you see
yourself in this way.”
DESIGN PROCESS 14
Fig. 12 The first mock up of the mirror cabinet, Note the flip of the red cap in the mirror.
Test person C did not have that much problem adjusting to this mirror, he thought that
the split in the middle was distracting but most striking was the fact that it was three
dimensional.
DESIGN PROCESS 15
Fig. 14 The mock up of the final proposal.
I wanted to give the mirror a bit more ambiguity to it. Make it more abstract so I brought
the door back but this time like a portal, with a hint of what’s inside shown by the angle
on the front doors. The storage is now on both sides and the mirror still has a sense of
nakedness to it (see fig. 14).
DESIGN PROCESS 16
The Audio/touch-oriented proposal
When I looked into how people have different views and use of objects, I did not only
discover that the objects were viewed or used in different ways because of previous
experiences, it also occurred to me that we categorise objects by our preconception of
what they are. Ljungberg said to me that products manifests preconceptions, which I
found as both striking and obvious at the same time, as with a lot of his thoughts. We
tend to categorise objects by our preconceptions on them, I found it interesting to blur
this line, to let the user experience and decide what it is.
DESIGN PROCESS 17
Fig. 17 Rendering of the desk idea.
- Abstracting
The desk idea ended up to much of a furniture and I wanted to go for a more
abstract kind of aesthetics where the viewers should ask themselves - “what is it?”.
The proposal should evoke a curiosity and really be on the border of a furniture and
instrument. So I slimmed down the desk idea to a proposal where I focused on the
bongo feature of a drum and the features of a cocktail table, hiding the drum skin on
the top (see fig. 18)
I came to think about a project by Katja Pettersson called Features of a material (2012)
(see fig. 19), where she created a white fragile environment with Styrofoam interior,
where one of the stools appeared to be a thin fragile Styrofoam stool, but were in fact
made of casted aluminium. Playing with our preconceptions in this way is not only an
DESIGN PROCESS 18
interesting way to work with furnitures but also an affectively way to reach the viewer
or user. This strengthen my idea of hiding the elements of a drum in a shape that is
mainly perceived as a furniture.
I worked with a cylindrical shape which I vacuum shaped, in which I mounted a
plastic drum skin stretched over a ring, like a tambourine (see fig. 20). The cylinder got
three hand carved legs to lift of the ground and letting the sound bounce out through
the open bottom.
DESIGN PROCESS 19
Constructionist proposal
When I read about unconscious inference it struck me that in order of understanding
the perceptual input we need references. To know how objects work and what scale
they have. I read the chapter Exformations in the book Designing Design by Kenya
Hara which was really interesting. In particular a project where they use a riverbed and
transform it to a highway. By which he explains that we constantly record details of our
surroundings which becomes our references later on.
Hara, 2008
In Thoughtless Acts? by Jane Fulton Suri, she talks about inviting curiosity, bodily
interactions with objects and especially how we interpret our surroundings, which
inspired me even more to explore my constructionist proposal. I believe that our
previous embodied experiences of objects influences how we interact and construct
with objects in the present.
Fig. 21 The parts of the kit which I tested in the Constructionist workshop.
DESIGN PROCESS 20
I thought it would be interesting to play with what objects become together with other
objects, again with the focus on that the individual subjects experiences and therefore
result in different uses or associations within the object.
I constructed a kit of 13 different parts most of them represented in cardboard (see
fig. 21) and tested it in a workshop (see p.12). The idea of this proposal is to investigate
whether our previous experiences will influence how we assemble the parts in the kit.
And that how we assemble them illustrate our reality in one way.
Fig. 22 Two initial combinations of the kit, displaying two different uses.
First I did a miniature model to test some combinations of the parts (see fig. 22). But
I realised that this also influenced me a lot in creating the parts, so I tried to step back
from these combinations and design for affordances rather than designed solutions.
This was extremely hard but I listened to what the participants said during the
workshop and developed the kit proposal (see fig. 23) with revised and new parts.
DESIGN PROCESS 21
Proposals
Proposal no.1 let you see yourself in two different ways. You can alter between
seeing yourself as you usually do, or as other people see you. The front doors is the
portal between you choosing to see how you actually look like (see fig. 25). They have a
shape that gives a hint of what’s inside (see fig 24). While on the inside you face the
naked 90 degree angle mirrors in which you, while facing the middle, see yourself as
others see you (see fig. 26) and when you move your body to the left or right, you see
yourself as you are used to. If you open the doors another step they will reveal the
storage on each side (see fig. 27). The sharp angular shape symbolises how the vision
rays bounce in multiple directions. I choose the yellow colour because I wanted some-
thing bright yet a defined colour. I wanted something bright because I did not want the
colour to eat up the visual experience too much.
Fig. 24 The front view displays the 90 degree angle, creating a perspective hint of what’s inside.
PROPOSALS 22
Fig. 25 Entering a new reality.
PROPOSALS 23
Fig. 26 Notice the placement of the hand.
PROPOSALS 24
Proposal no.2 aim to play with the preconceptions we have with objects. Instead of
asking “what is this object?” I want the viewers and potential users to ask “what is this
object to me?”. I could have made a blob and throw it on the ground saying “this could
be whatever you like!” but I thought as a designer it would be more interesting to try to
merge the identities of two different kinds of objects, in this case a furniture and an
instrument (see fig. 28).
The idea is that the senses of touch and hearing will activate a different reality of
the object oposed to vision. The initial preconception initiated by vision sense, speaks
furniture and perhaps a table while interacting with the sense of touch and hearing will
indicate a instrument, a drum. Making the viewer or user question their way of
categorizing objects and how different senses can reveal different realities.
I chose to paint it to hide the drum skin but also to give it more of an united look (see
fig. 29), percieving it more as an abstract shape. The matte dark blue colour symbolises
the dark bassy sound that the drum gives but also gives the object a kind of intimate
look. The shape is inspired by a 18” floor tom drum, from which the object got it’s
cylindrical shape and diameter, but also the feature of three legs (see fig. 30).
PROPOSALS 25
Fig. 29 The drum skin has the same colour as the body of the object to hide it’s features from the eye.
Fig. 30 The shape of the legs is meant to aspire ancient drum skin, stretched on the outside of the
drums, but the shape is also an continuation of the abstract body.
PROPOSALS 26
Proposal no.3 is a user connected defined kit. What I am after with this proposal is
similar to the second one, to dissolve the categories and the preconceptions that
comes with objects. However, this proposal also deals with what the parts mean to the
user and that how they are assembled together with the users previous experiences
makes the object, the constructionist idea of giving meaning to something pushed to
it’s maximum.
The kit consists of nine parts who all where the shade of grey (see fig. 31), to give
them a neutral look so that the objects shape and features won’t be shadowed by
preconceptions of material properties or associations. When I did the constructionist
workshop to test the kit parts one of the participants said “Every object in itself is
nothing”, which was exactly what I was after, that it is how we assembly them with our
previous experiences that they become something.
As in previous proposals I here too worked with abstract aesthetics, shapes that
resembled other objects but in this context became something new and inspired new
ways of using them. Elements of weight and balance came also to play a roll in
designing the parts. The combinations that can be built with this kit is numerous, some
become more sculptural while some become more functional (see fig. 32). This
interactive proposal have, just as the other two proposals it’s perhaps greatest value
as an experience rather than the actual use it can afford. Also by building with it
together with others you will also experience how they view and think with the parts.
PROPOSALS 27
Fig. 32 Two different setups of the kit.
PROPOSALS 28
Discussion
One example of this is if the Proposal no.1 would have been more of a product, the
customers would perhaps have demanded a regular mirror on the front side of the
doors. However I brought the doors back without mirrors on them, to become a portal
and give the object a sense of mystique.
I hope this object will evoke thoughts on how our senses work and the
capriciousness of perception. This in turn, I hope will give a deeper understanding on
the fact that we view the world differently and the value of showing tolerance to each
other.
During the exhibition it was just as I had read, some people don’t see or understand
the mirror image, most of the people get surprised or fascinated by what they see and
very few did not want to see themselves. What was interesting was that it was often
not until they touched their faced that they realised what they actually saw. Which
supports the idea of how important cross-referencing is to our senses, that what we
see only means something if we can cross-reference it with another sense, in this case
the sense of touch.
There was a risk that Proposal no.2 would appear to be neither a table nor an
instrument, which would have seemed like a failure, but the focus is, as in this whole
project not on the proposals by themselves, but the experience of the project as a
whole and the conversations between the people taking part of the project.
DISCUSSION 29
People actually perceived it as a furniture in the exhibition by only seeing it, however
a numerous of times people perceived it as a stool instead of a table, even though it’s
proportions. My guess is that the drum skin might have been perceived as a cushion
on a seat. But almost no one perceived it as a drum before touching it - when it almost
every time had the same procedure; they looked at it, thinking of furniture, they
approached it, placed the fingers on top of the drum skin, started to feel the surface
and shortly started to tap their fingers to create a sound followed by saying “it’s a
drum” with a slight surprised face expression. On which I explain that they use previous
experiences together with their senses to understand the object, surfaces that flex like
this use to give off a sound if tapped - therefore instantly trying tapping it.
I had an idea for a proposal early on in the project which was of a constructionist
nature, but then I thought it was too different from the other ideas and that it would
not fit in the project. However, after reading about unconscious inference, Hall’s
constructionist theory, Exformations by Hara and Thoughtless Acts? by Fulton Suri, I
realised that the idea of having a constructive proposal also has it’s place within this
project. Because it does not matter what this proposal transforms to just the very fact
that it does and it does so with our previous experiences as captain of this explorative
ship.
In the exhibition Proposal no.3 took a lot of visual space, both because of it’s size and
nature but mostly because it was interactive and people built a lot of objects with it
(see fig. 33 and Appendix 2). One time when I returned to the exhibition space, someone
had
braided the straps to an intricate shape, which is something I never would have
thought of and I speculate that perhaps that person had braided hair or had done
crafts in some way.
Fig. 33 Visitors is creating with the kit, during the spring exhibition.
DISCUSSION 30
Unanticipated consequences
I have realised that confusion is something that comes up around my proposals which
first might seem only negative, but it is actually positive thing, because I think that
confusion can challenge norms, or at least maybe start a discussion on what it is that’s
confusing.
Exhibition
This degree work worked quite well in the exhibition format. I got to meet a lot of people
and talk about how we perceive, how we generalize, how we live in our subjective
realities. Aside from the three proposals I had a short film about the proposals which
were on display in the exhibition (see Appendix 1). I was careful not to display the film
as an instruction video, by turning it from the main flow of visitors, but it became a
good aid to communicate that my proposals had more than one side to them.
DISCUSSION 31
Acknowledgements
Tutors
Loove Broms
Martin Avila
Jenny Althoff
Sara Teleman
Cheryl Akner-Koler
Anders Ljungberg
Katja Pettersson
Examinator
Bo Westerlund
Percussional guidance
Jean Louis Huhta
Constructional guidance
Elin Lindström
Victor Alge
Inger Bengtsson
Jonas Osslund
CNC operator
Daniel Reinius
Constructional assistance
Alexander Beveridge
Fabian Bender
Camera Equipment
Benjamin Wallin
Peer reader
Matilda Legeby
Life coach
Gustav Sjöstedt
Sponsors
FirstSurfaceMirror.com
Bengtssons Smide AB
Vink Essåplast Group AB
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 32
References
Articles
Costandi, Mo (2011) Memory contaminates perception. The Guardian.
Grewal, Daisy (2011) The Evolution of Prejudice: Scientists see the beginnings of racism
in monkeys. Scientific American.
Hatfield, Gary (2002) Perception as Unconscious Inference. Perception and the Physical
World: Psychological and Philosophical Issue in Perception. John Wiley & Sons,
Ltd.
Books
Fulton Suri, Jane (2005) Thoughtless Acts? IDEO. Cronicle Books.
Proust, Marcel (1913) In search of lost time: Swann’s Way. Albert Bonniers förlag.
Sacks, Oliver (1985) The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat. Brombergs Bokförlag AB.
Film
Eagleman, David (2015) The Brain With David Eagleman. Blink Films.
Internet
Brady, Michael (2017) How do we see things upright if the image formed on the retina in
our eye is an inverted one? Physics & Astronomy Online. Checked 2017-03-27.
http://www.physlink.com/education/askexperts/ae353.cfm
Chekov, Kevin Kolbe Paul Feeney (2013) The Great Generalisation Machine. Checked
2017-03-27. http://www.chekov.org/blog/great-generalisation-machine
REFERENCES 33
Images
Cover photo
By Jens Löfgren.
REFERENCES 34