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Richard Gregory

Richard Langton Gregory, CBE, FRS, FRSE (24 July 1923 – 17 May 2010) was a British psychologist and Professor of Neuropsychology at the University of Bristol.

Richard Gregory
Gregory outside the café on St Michael's Hill, Bristol, which inspired his (re-)discovery of the "café wall illusion", February 2010
Born
Richard Langton Gregory

(1923-07-24)24 July 1923
London, England
Died17 May 2010(2010-05-17) (aged 86)
Bristol, England
Spouses
Margaret Hope Pattison Muir
(m. 1953; div. 1966)
Freja Mary Balchin
(m. 1967; div. 1976)
PartnerPriscilla Heard
Children2
AwardsMichael Faraday Prize (1992)
Scientific career
FieldsPsychology, neuropsychology
InstitutionsUniversity of Bristol
Websiterichardgregory.org

Life and career edit

Richard Gregory was born in London. He was the son of Christopher Clive Langton Gregory, the first director of the University of London Observatory, and his first wife, Helen Patricia (née Gibson).[1][2]

Gregory served with the Royal Air Force's Signals branch during World War II, and after the war earned an RAF scholarship to Downing College, Cambridge.[3] He was made an Honorary Fellow of Downing in 1999.[citation needed]

In 1967, with Prof. Donald Michie and Prof. Christopher Longuet-Higgins, he founded the Department of Machine Intelligence and Perception, a forerunner of the Department of Artificial Intelligence, at the University of Edinburgh. He was Head of the Bionics Research Laboratory, Professor of Bionics, and Department Chairman 1968–70. Gregory was founding editor of the journal Perception (1972), which emphasized phenomenology and novel percepts produced by new stimuli.[4] He was a founding member of the Experimental Psychology Society and served as its president in 1981–1982.

He collaborated with W. E. Hick for the latter's influential paper "On the rate of gain of information". He commented: "I was the only subject for his gain of information experiment to complete the course, as he was the only other subject and he packed it in when the apparatus fell apart."[5]

In 1981, he founded The Exploratory, a hands-on science centre in Bristol, the first of its kind in the UK.[6][7] In 1989, he was appointed Osher Visiting Fellow of the Exploratorium, a similar scientific education centre in San Francisco, California.

Gregory has called Hermann von Helmholtz one of his major inspirations.[8]

He appeared on, or was an advisor to, numerous science-related television programmes in the UK and worldwide. His particular interest was in optical illusions and what these revealed about human perception. He wrote and edited several books, notably Eye and Brain and Mind in Science. One of his hobbies was punning (making puns). In April 1993, he was the guest for BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, where his favourite choice was Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 30.[9]

Having suffered a stroke a few days earlier, he died on 17 May 2010 at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, surrounded by family and friends.

Lectures edit

In 1967, he delivered the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures on The Intelligent Eye.

Contribution edit

Gregory's main contribution to the discipline was in the development of cognitive psychology, in particular that of "Perception as hypotheses", an approach which had its origin in the work of Hermann von Helmholtz (1821–1894) and his student Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Between them, the two Germans laid the basis of investigating how the senses work, especially sight and hearing.

According to Gregory, Helmholtz should take the credit for realising that perception is not just a passive acceptance of stimuli, but an active process involving memory and other internal processes.[10]

Gregory progressed this idea with a key analogy. The process whereby the brain puts together a coherent view of the outside world is analogous to the way in which the sciences build up their picture of the world, by a kind of hypothetico-deductive process. Although this takes place on a quite different time-scale, and inside one head instead of a community, nevertheless, according to Gregory, perception shares many traits with scientific method. A series of works by Gregory developed this idea in some detail.[11][12][13]

 
Kanizsa triangle showing illusory contours

Gregory's ideas ran counter to those of the American direct realist psychologist J. J. Gibson, whose 1950 The Perception of the Visual World was dominant when Gregory was a younger man. Much in Gregory's work can be seen as a reply to Gibson's ideas, and as the incorporation of explicitly Bayesian concepts into the understanding of how sensory evidence is combined with pre-existing ("prior") beliefs.[14] Gregory argued that optical illusions, such as the illusory contours in the Kanizsa triangle, demonstrated the Bayesian processing of perceptual information by the brain.[15]

Works edit

  • Recovery from Early Blindness: A Case Study (1963), with Jean Wallace, Exp. Soc. Monogr. No.2. Cambridge: Heffers. {C & M of P. pp. 65–129}.
  • Eye and Brain: The Psychology of Seeing (1966), London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. [in twelve languages]. Second Edition (1972). Third Edition (1977). Fourth Edition (1990). USA: Princeton University Press; (1994) Oxford: Oxford University Press. Fifth Edition (1997) Oxford University Press and (1998) Princeton University Press.
  • The Intelligent Eye (1970), London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. [in 6 languages].
  • Illusion in Nature and Art (1973), (ed. with Sir Ernst Gombrich), London: Duckworth.
  • Concepts and Mechanisms of Perception (1974), London: Duckworth. [collected papers].
  • Mind in Science: A History of Explanations of Psychology and Physics (1981), London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; USA: CUP. Paperback, Peregrine (1984). (Macmillan Scientific Book Club choice). Transl. Italian, La Mente nella Scienze, Mondadori (1985).
  • Odd Perceptions [essays] (1986), London: Methuen. Paperback (1988) Routledge. (2nd edition 1990–91).
  • Creative Intelligences (1987), (ed. with Pauline Marstrand), London: Frances Pinter. ISBN 0-86187-673-3.
  • Oxford Companion to the Mind (1987), (ed., with Zangwill, O.), Oxford: OUP. [translated into Italian, French, Spanish. In TSP Softbacks, and other Book Clubs]. (Paperback 1998).
  • Evolution of the Eye and Visual System (1992), (ed. with John R. Cronly-Dillon), vol. 2 of Vision and Visual Dysfunction. London: Macmillan.
  • Even Odder Perceptions (1994), [essays]. London: Routledge.
  • The Artful Eye (1995), (ed. with J. Harris, P. Heard and D. Rose). Oxford: OUP
  • Mirrors in Mind (1997), Oxford: W. H. Freeman/Spektrum. (1998) Penguin.
  • The Mind Makers (1998), London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
  • Seeing Through Illusions (2009), OUP.
  • Main journal publications at http://www.richardgregory.org/

Degrees edit

Year Degree
1950 M.A. (Cantab)
1983 D.Sc. (Bristol)

Honorary degrees edit

Year Honorary degree
1990 D. Univ. (Open)
D. Univ. (Stirling)
1993 LL.D (Bristol)
1996 D.Sc. (East Anglia)
D.Sc. (Exon)
1998 D.Univ. (York)
D.Sc. (U.M.I.S.T.)
1999 D.Sc. (Keele)
2000 D.Sc. (Edinburgh)

Family edit

In 1953, he married Margaret Hope Pattison Muir, one son, one daughter (marriage dissolved 1966). In 1967, he married Freja Mary Balchin,[16] the daughter of writers Elizabeth and Nigel Balchin, (marriage dissolved 1976). Gregory is survived by two children (Mark and Romilly Gregory), two grandchildren (Luutsche Ozinga and Kiran Rogers) and his long term companion Priscilla Heard.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  • "Richard Gregory: Curriculum Vitae". Retrieved 30 July 2005.
  1. ^ Brennan, J. (7 July 2010). "Richard Gregory (1923–2010)". The Psychologist. 23: 541.
  2. ^ Land, Michael F.; Heard, Priscilla (28 March 2018). "Richard Langton Gregory. 24 July 1923—17 May 2010". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 64: 163–182. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2017.0034. ISSN 0080-4606.
  3. ^ "Richard Gregory: experimental psychologist". The Times. 19 May 2010. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
  4. ^ "Professor Richard Gregory". The UCL Centre for the History of Medicine. University College London. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  5. ^ Gregory, R. L. "Reflections on Early Days: Past Perceptions". Experimental Psychology Society. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  6. ^ "The Exploratory – History". www.exploratory.org.uk. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  7. ^ "The Exploratory – History". www.exploratory.org.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2018.
  8. ^ "One on One with Richard Gregory", The Psychologist, vol. 21, no 6, June 2008, p. 568.
  9. ^ "Richard Gregory, Desert Island Discs – BBC Radio 4". BBC. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  10. ^ Gregory R. L. (ed.) 1987. Oxford Companion to the Mind: see essay on 'Perception as hypotheses', p. 608. Oxford: OUP. ISBN 0-19-866124-X
  11. ^ Gregory R. L. 1966. Eye and Brain: the psychology of seeing. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 5th edition 1997, Oxford University Press/Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-04837-1
  12. ^ Gregory R. L. 1970. The Intelligent Eye. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-00021-7
  13. ^ Gregory R. L. 1974. Concepts and Mechanisms of Perception. London: Duckworth. [collected papers] ISBN 0-7156-0556-9
  14. ^ Transcript of interview with Gregory in "Today's Neuroscience, Tomorrow's History" Archive, Wellcome Trust 2008
  15. ^ Gregory, Richard (1 April 2006). "Bayes Window (4): Table of illusions". Perception. 35 (4): 431–432. doi:10.1068/p3504ed. PMID 16700285.
  16. ^ GRO Register of Marriages: JUN 1967 5d 1808 ST PANCRAS – Richard L. Gregory = Freja M. Balchin
  17. ^ "Professor Richard Gregory". Telegraph. 24 May 2010. Retrieved 13 October 2015.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Richard Gregory at Wikimedia Commons
  • Professor Richard Gregory on-line
  • Richard Gregory – Why I Tell Jokes video and telling his life story at Web of Stories (video)
  • Daily Telegraph Obituary
  • The Exploratory in Bristol
  • Richard Gregory: a life of science and delight – reflections on his life by Sue Blackmore in The Guardian
  • The Hollow-Face illusion (also known as hollow-mask illusion) in a version using Charlie Chaplin's head has become known to a wide audience.
  • Richard Gregory on the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group website

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For persons of a similar name see Richard Gregory disambiguation Richard Langton Gregory CBE FRS FRSE 24 July 1923 17 May 2010 was a British psychologist and Professor of Neuropsychology at the University of Bristol Richard GregoryCBE FRS FRSEGregory outside the cafe on St Michael s Hill Bristol which inspired his re discovery of the cafe wall illusion February 2010BornRichard Langton Gregory 1923 07 24 24 July 1923London EnglandDied17 May 2010 2010 05 17 aged 86 Bristol EnglandSpousesMargaret Hope Pattison Muir m 1953 div 1966 wbr Freja Mary Balchin m 1967 div 1976 wbr PartnerPriscilla HeardChildren2AwardsMichael Faraday Prize 1992 Scientific careerFieldsPsychology neuropsychologyInstitutionsUniversity of BristolWebsiterichardgregory wbr org Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Lectures 2 Contribution 3 Works 4 Degrees 5 Honorary degrees 6 Family 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLife and career editRichard Gregory was born in London He was the son of Christopher Clive Langton Gregory the first director of the University of London Observatory and his first wife Helen Patricia nee Gibson 1 2 Gregory served with the Royal Air Force s Signals branch during World War II and after the war earned an RAF scholarship to Downing College Cambridge 3 He was made an Honorary Fellow of Downing in 1999 citation needed In 1967 with Prof Donald Michie and Prof Christopher Longuet Higgins he founded the Department of Machine Intelligence and Perception a forerunner of the Department of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Edinburgh He was Head of the Bionics Research Laboratory Professor of Bionics and Department Chairman 1968 70 Gregory was founding editor of the journal Perception 1972 which emphasized phenomenology and novel percepts produced by new stimuli 4 He was a founding member of the Experimental Psychology Society and served as its president in 1981 1982 He collaborated with W E Hick for the latter s influential paper On the rate of gain of information He commented I was the only subject for his gain of information experiment to complete the course as he was the only other subject and he packed it in when the apparatus fell apart 5 In 1981 he founded The Exploratory a hands on science centre in Bristol the first of its kind in the UK 6 7 In 1989 he was appointed Osher Visiting Fellow of the Exploratorium a similar scientific education centre in San Francisco California Gregory has called Hermann von Helmholtz one of his major inspirations 8 He appeared on or was an advisor to numerous science related television programmes in the UK and worldwide His particular interest was in optical illusions and what these revealed about human perception He wrote and edited several books notably Eye and Brain and Mind in Science One of his hobbies was punning making puns In April 1993 he was the guest for BBC Radio 4 s Desert Island Discs where his favourite choice was Beethoven s Piano Sonata No 30 9 Having suffered a stroke a few days earlier he died on 17 May 2010 at the Bristol Royal Infirmary surrounded by family and friends Lectures edit In 1967 he delivered the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures on The Intelligent Eye Contribution editGregory s main contribution to the discipline was in the development of cognitive psychology in particular that of Perception as hypotheses an approach which had its origin in the work of Hermann von Helmholtz 1821 1894 and his student Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Between them the two Germans laid the basis of investigating how the senses work especially sight and hearing According to Gregory Helmholtz should take the credit for realising that perception is not just a passive acceptance of stimuli but an active process involving memory and other internal processes 10 Gregory progressed this idea with a key analogy The process whereby the brain puts together a coherent view of the outside world is analogous to the way in which the sciences build up their picture of the world by a kind of hypothetico deductive process Although this takes place on a quite different time scale and inside one head instead of a community nevertheless according to Gregory perception shares many traits with scientific method A series of works by Gregory developed this idea in some detail 11 12 13 nbsp Kanizsa triangle showing illusory contours Gregory s ideas ran counter to those of the American direct realist psychologist J J Gibson whose 1950 The Perception of the Visual World was dominant when Gregory was a younger man Much in Gregory s work can be seen as a reply to Gibson s ideas and as the incorporation of explicitly Bayesian concepts into the understanding of how sensory evidence is combined with pre existing prior beliefs 14 Gregory argued that optical illusions such as the illusory contours in the Kanizsa triangle demonstrated the Bayesian processing of perceptual information by the brain 15 Works editRecovery from Early Blindness A Case Study 1963 with Jean Wallace Exp Soc Monogr No 2 Cambridge Heffers C amp M of P pp 65 129 Eye and Brain The Psychology of Seeing 1966 London Weidenfeld and Nicolson in twelve languages Second Edition 1972 Third Edition 1977 Fourth Edition 1990 USA Princeton University Press 1994 Oxford Oxford University Press Fifth Edition 1997 Oxford University Press and 1998 Princeton University Press The Intelligent Eye 1970 London Weidenfeld and Nicolson in 6 languages Illusion in Nature and Art 1973 ed with Sir Ernst Gombrich London Duckworth Concepts and Mechanisms of Perception 1974 London Duckworth collected papers Mind in Science A History of Explanations of Psychology and Physics 1981 London Weidenfeld and Nicolson USA CUP Paperback Peregrine 1984 Macmillan Scientific Book Club choice Transl Italian La Mente nella Scienze Mondadori 1985 Odd Perceptions essays 1986 London Methuen Paperback 1988 Routledge 2nd edition 1990 91 Creative Intelligences 1987 ed with Pauline Marstrand London Frances Pinter ISBN 0 86187 673 3 Oxford Companion to the Mind 1987 ed with Zangwill O Oxford OUP translated into Italian French Spanish In TSP Softbacks and other Book Clubs Paperback 1998 Evolution of the Eye and Visual System 1992 ed with John R Cronly Dillon vol 2 of Vision and Visual Dysfunction London Macmillan Even Odder Perceptions 1994 essays London Routledge The Artful Eye 1995 ed with J Harris P Heard and D Rose Oxford OUP Mirrors in Mind 1997 Oxford W H Freeman Spektrum 1998 Penguin The Mind Makers 1998 London Weidenfeld and Nicolson Seeing Through Illusions 2009 OUP Main journal publications at http www richardgregory org Degrees editYear Degree 1950 M A Cantab 1983 D Sc Bristol Honorary degrees editYear Honorary degree 1990 D Univ Open D Univ Stirling 1993 LL D Bristol 1996 D Sc East Anglia D Sc Exon 1998 D Univ York D Sc U M I S T 1999 D Sc Keele 2000 D Sc Edinburgh Family editIn 1953 he married Margaret Hope Pattison Muir one son one daughter marriage dissolved 1966 In 1967 he married Freja Mary Balchin 16 the daughter of writers Elizabeth and Nigel Balchin marriage dissolved 1976 Gregory is survived by two children Mark and Romilly Gregory two grandchildren Luutsche Ozinga and Kiran Rogers and his long term companion Priscilla Heard 17 See also editOptical illusionReferences edit Richard Gregory Curriculum Vitae Retrieved 30 July 2005 Brennan J 7 July 2010 Richard Gregory 1923 2010 The Psychologist 23 541 Land Michael F Heard Priscilla 28 March 2018 Richard Langton Gregory 24 July 1923 17 May 2010 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 64 163 182 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2017 0034 ISSN 0080 4606 Richard Gregory experimental psychologist The Times 19 May 2010 Retrieved 23 May 2010 Professor Richard Gregory The UCL Centre for the History of Medicine University College London Retrieved 8 August 2016 Gregory R L Reflections on Early Days Past Perceptions Experimental Psychology Society Retrieved 11 November 2017 The Exploratory History www exploratory org uk Retrieved 8 August 2016 The Exploratory History www exploratory org uk Retrieved 24 December 2018 One on One with Richard Gregory The Psychologist vol 21 no 6 June 2008 p 568 Richard Gregory Desert Island Discs BBC Radio 4 BBC Retrieved 28 December 2016 Gregory R L ed 1987 Oxford Companion to the Mind see essay on Perception as hypotheses p 608 Oxford OUP ISBN 0 19 866124 X Gregory R L 1966 Eye and Brain the psychology of seeing London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 5th edition 1997 Oxford University Press Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 04837 1 Gregory R L 1970 The Intelligent Eye London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 00021 7 Gregory R L 1974 Concepts and Mechanisms of Perception London Duckworth collected papers ISBN 0 7156 0556 9 Transcript of interview with Gregory in Today s Neuroscience Tomorrow s History Archive Wellcome Trust 2008 Gregory Richard 1 April 2006 Bayes Window 4 Table of illusions Perception 35 4 431 432 doi 10 1068 p3504ed PMID 16700285 GRO Register of Marriages JUN 1967 5d 1808 ST PANCRAS Richard L Gregory Freja M Balchin Professor Richard Gregory Telegraph 24 May 2010 Retrieved 13 October 2015 External links edit nbsp Media related to Richard Gregory at Wikimedia Commons Professor Richard Gregory on line Richard Gregory Why I Tell Jokes video and telling his life story at Web of Stories video Daily Telegraph Obituary The Exploratory in Bristol Richard Gregory a life of science and delight reflections on his life by Sue Blackmore in The Guardian The Hollow Face illusion also known as hollow mask illusion in a version using Charlie Chaplin s head has become known to a wide audience Richard Gregory on the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Gregory amp oldid 1155870372, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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