抄録
Recent research on human perception is selectively reviewed with a focus on emer-
ging issues in cognitive science and cognitive psychology. An important new approach
 to perception is identified that emphasizes integrated processes involving relationships
 among different features extracted from multiple modalities. We propose this new
 approach termed “integrated perception”. Characteristics of “integrated perception”
include an emphasis on trade-offs and interactive relations between perceptual pro-
cesses, and incorporation implicitly connected processes as well as individual differences.
 These topics tend to be discounted in conventional approaches. Instead, conventional
 approaches in cognitive and brain sciences have been based on traditional reduction-
ism which focuses exclusively on accounts of individual constituent processes, but not
 their inter-relationships. Alternatively, new research themes reflecting integrated per-
ception feature topics such as: Attention, Object & scene perception, Representation
 of body and space, Trans-modal perception, Aesthetics, and Synesthesia (i.e. AORTAS
 project). Recent progress in this vein is introduced which concerns research on object
 view dependency, visual-thermal interaction, and Japanese grapheme-color synesthesia.