1 Familiar size and the perception of depth --
2 A quantitative approach to figural "goodness" --
3 Apparent spatial arrangement and perceived brightness --
4 Perception: toward the recovery of a definition --
5 The psychophysics of pictorial perception --
6 Pictorial recognition as an unlearned ability: a study of one child's performance --
7 Recognition of faces --
9 Attention, organization, and consciousness --
10 Components of literacy --
11 Reading as an intentional behavior --
12 The representation of things and people --
13 Higher-order stimuli and inter-response coupling in the perception of the visual world --
14 Film cutting and visual momentum --
15 Pictorial functions and perceptual structures --
16 Levels of perceptual organization --
17 How big is a stimulus --
18 From perception: experience and explanations --
19 The perception of pictorial representations --
20 Movies in the mind's eye --
21 Looking ahead (one glance at a time) --
22 The piecemeal, constructive, and schematic nature of perception --
23 Hochberg: a perceptual psychologist --
24 Mental schemata and the limits of perception --
25 Integration of visual information across saccades --
26 Scene perception: the world through a window --
27 "How big is a stimulus?": learning about imagery by studying perception --
28 How big is an optical invariant?: limits of tau in time-to-contact judgments --
29 Hochberg and inattentional blindness --
30 Framing the rules of perception: Hochberg versus Galileo, Gestalts, Garner, and Gibson --
31 On the internal consistency of perceptual organization --
32 Piecemeal perception and Hochberg's window: grouping of stimulus elements over distances --
33 The resurrection of simplicity in vision --
34 Shape constancy and perceptual simplicity: Hochberg's fundamental contributions --
35 Constructing and interpreting the world in the cerebral hemispheres --
36 Segmentation, grouping, and shape: some Hochbergian questions --
37 Ideas of lasting influence: Hochberg's anticipation of research on change blindness and motion-picture perception --
38 On the cognitive ecology of the cinema --
39 Hochberg on the perception of pictures and of the world --
40 Celebrating the usefulness of pictorial information in visual perception --
41 Mental structure in experts' perception on human movement --
Julian Hochberg: biography and bibliography.