Hiroshi Ono
Distinguished Research ProfessorProfessor Emeritus
Locations / Contact Info:
223 Behavioural Science - BSBKeele CampusPhone: 736-2100 Ext. 66264
Email address(es):
Web site(s):
Research Areas
Faculty & School/Dept.
Faculty of Health - Department of Psychology
Degrees
B.A. - 1960
Dartmouth College
PhD - 1965
Stanford University
Supervision
Currently available to supervise graduate students: Yes
Currently taking on work-study students, Graduate Assistants or Volunteers: Yes
Available to supervise undergraduate thesis projects: Yes
Current Research
Visual Direction: How one judges the visual direction of an object in space is described formally and elegantly by Wells's (1792) propositions and by Hering's (1879/1942) principles of visual direction. Although not all of our work on visual direction results directly from the propositions or the principles, the majority can be delineated from them. Currently, we are exploring how the visual system processes the directions of objects contained in monocularly seen areas, and the consequences of the ways in which these areas are processed. These monocularly seen areas have received some attention in the stereopsis literature, but they have received very little attention in the visual direction and the shape perception literature, despite the problem having been delineated in what is now known as Leonardo da Vinci's constraint.
Visual Stability: We have begun new research on how the visual world remains stable when we move our head and eyes. With every movement of the eyes, images of stationary objects sweep across the retinae. Despite this, however, the world appears stable. To date this stability or constancy has been studied primarily under conditions in which the head is held stationary and only the eyes are free to move. The stimulus situation we examine is an extension of this traditional one; namely perceptual stability when both the head and the eyes are free to move.