This question ties together the NPR Fresh Air interview transcript and Textbook Chapter 3 & 5 materials.
Once Dr. Barry's vision changed to be 3-D, she discusses her appreciation for trees (among other things). Specifically, she stated that she enjoyed "the way tree canopies are, where the branches are reaching out toward you, where the different branches enclose palpable pockets of space, I sometimes find myself just admiring the pockets of space between the different branches in a tree and actually walking and immersing myself into those pockets of space. "
In the brain, after being processed by the primary visual cortex, where does spatial perception like where the tree leaves and branches are relative to each other get further processed?
Parietal lobe
Temporal lobe
Occipital lobe