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en
CR
Perception
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Retinal : The difference between the two images the retinas receive of an object
Convergence : The extent to which the eyes converge inward when looking at an object
Proximity : We group nearby figures together
Similarity : We group similar figures together
Continuity : We perceive smooth, continuous patterns rather than discontinuous ones
Closure : We fill gaps to create a whole object
Connectedness : Objects that are connected are some how grounded together
Familiarity : Objects in familiar positions are easier to recognize
Symmetry : Tendency to perceive preferentially forms that make up mirror images
Visual Cliff : Reveals that many species have depth perception at, or very soon after birth
Relative Size : The smaller image of two objects of the same size appears more distant
Interposition : Nearby objects partially obstruct our view of more distant objects
Relative Height : Higher objects are farther away
Relative Motion : As we move, stable objects appear to move relative to us
Linear Perspective : The converging of parallel lines indicates greater distance (Vanishing point)
Relative Brightness : Dimmer objects seem more distant
Perceptual Constancy : Refers to the principle that we perceive objects as unchanging
Illusion : Created when perceptual clues are distorted and our brain cannot correctly interpret space, size, and depth
Selective Attention : The ability to listen to only one conversation in a noisy room
Gestalt : A German word meaning a "form" or a "whole"
Perception
Across:| 2. | The converging of parallel lines indicates greater distance (Vanishing point) | | 9. | A German word meaning a "form" or a "whole" | | 10. | We fill gaps to create a whole object | | 11. | The difference between the two images the retinas receive of an object | | 14. | We perceive smooth, continuous patterns rather than discontinuous ones | | 15. | Created when perceptual clues are distorted and our brain cannot correctly interpret space, size, and depth |
| | Down:| 1. | We group similar figures together | | 3. | Reveals that many species have depth perception at, or very soon after birth | | 4. | Objects in familiar positions are easier to recognize | | 5. | Nearby objects partially obstruct our view of more distant objects | | 6. | As we move, stable objects appear to move relative to us | | 7. | Higher objects are farther away | | 8. | The extent to which the eyes converge inward when looking at an object | | 12. | Tendency to perceive preferentially forms that make up mirror images | | 13. | Objects that are connected are some how grounded together |
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© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Perception
Across:| 2. | The converging of parallel lines indicates greater distance (Vanishing point) | | 9. | A German word meaning a "form" or a "whole" | | 10. | We fill gaps to create a whole object | | 11. | The difference between the two images the retinas receive of an object | | 14. | We perceive smooth, continuous patterns rather than discontinuous ones | | 15. | Created when perceptual clues are distorted and our brain cannot correctly interpret space, size, and depth |
| | Down:| 1. | We group similar figures together | | 3. | Reveals that many species have depth perception at, or very soon after birth | | 4. | Objects in familiar positions are easier to recognize | | 5. | Nearby objects partially obstruct our view of more distant objects | | 6. | As we move, stable objects appear to move relative to us | | 7. | Higher objects are farther away | | 8. | The extent to which the eyes converge inward when looking at an object | | 12. | Tendency to perceive preferentially forms that make up mirror images | | 13. | Objects that are connected are some how grounded together |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only