James E. Cutting
Professor and Chair
- email : jec7@cornell.edu
- fax : 607-255-8433
- phone : 607-592-1994
- 270 Uris Hall
- Cornell University
- Ithaca NY 14853-7601
-
Office Hours:
M 9:45 - 11:15
Interests
Perception of cinema and pictures; art and psychology; perception of motion, depth, and layout; event perception; structural and functional analyses of perceptual stimuli.
Downloads of articles, including those listed below, are available on my personal website.
Perception, Cognition & Development
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Selected Publications
- Cutting, J. E., Brunick, K. L., & DeLong, J. E. (2011). The changing poetics of the dissolve in Hollywood film. Empirical Studies of the Arts, 29, 149-169.
- Cutting, J.E., Brunick, K. L., & DeLong, J. E. (2011). How act structure sculpts shot lengths and shot transitions in Hollywood film. Projections: The Journal for Movies and Mind, 5, 1-14.
- Cutting, J.E., DeLong, J.E., & Brunick, K.L. (2011). Visual activity in Hollywood film: 1935 to 2005 and beyond. Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts, 5, 115-125.
- Cutting, J.E., DeLong, J.E., & Nothelfer, C.E. (2010). Attention and the evolution of Hollywood film. Psychological Science, 21, 440-447.
- Cutting, J.E. (2009). The end of art? Empirical Studies in the Arts, 27, 151-158.
- Cutting, J.E. (2006). Impressionism and its canon. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
- Cutting, J.E. (2003). Gustave Caillebotte, French Impressionism, and mere exposure. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 10, 319-343.
- Cutting, J.E. (2002). Representing motion in a static image: Constraints and parallels in science, art, and popular culture. Perception, 31, 1165-1194.
- Cutting, J.E. (2000). Images, imagination, and movement: Pictorial representations and their development in the work of James Gibson. Perception, 29, 635-648.
Links
- The Society for the Cognitive Studies of the Moving Image (SCSMI)
- Association for Psychological Science
- Psychology 2050/6050: Perception
3/4 credits
Fall 2010 information. Introductory investigation of all sensory modalities. A user's manual for your body. Psych 6050 is for graduates students only. - Psychology 3050: Visual Perception
4 credits, also Visual Studies 3305
Spring 2011 information. A sustained investigation of depiction of depth and time from Paleolithic art to MTV. Not taught in 2012 - Psychology 6220: Perception, Cognition, and Development (P.C.D.) Lunch
Fall 2011 information. A topics oriented seminar for graduate students and faculty. 0 credits >
updated on Thursday, Aug 11 2011 @ 10:33am
