Chapter 4: Problem 14
Which school of painting applied the theory of feature analysis to canvas by building fiqures out of simple features? A. Kineticism B. Impressionism C. Surrealism D. Cubism
Chapter 4: Problem 14
Which school of painting applied the theory of feature analysis to canvas by building fiqures out of simple features? A. Kineticism B. Impressionism C. Surrealism D. Cubism
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Get started for freeThe illusion of movement created by presenting visual stimuli in rapid succession is called: A. convergence. B. retinal disparity. C. motion parallax. D. the phi phenomenon.
The visual pathway that has been characterized as _______ travels through the dorsal stream to the parietal lobes, whereas the ______ travels through the ventral stream to the temporal lobes. A. the what pathway; the where pathway B. the where pathway; the what pathway C. the opponent process pathway; the trichromatic pathway D. the trichromatic pathway; the opponent process pathway
A tone-deaf person would probably not be able to tell two musical notes apart unless they were very different. We could say that this person has a relatively large: A. just noticeable difference. B. relative threshold. C. absolute threshold. D. detection threshold.
In psychophysical research, the absolute threshold has been arbitrarily defined as: A. the stimulus intensity that can be detected \(100 \%\) of the time. B. the stimulus intensity that can be detected \(50 \%\) of the time. C. the minimum amount of difference in intensity needed to tell two stimuli apart. D. a constant proportion of the size of the initial stimulus.
In a painting, train tracks may look as if they go off into the distance because the artist draws the tracks as converging lines, a pictorial cue to depth known as: A. interposition. B. texture gradient. C. convergence. D. linear perspective.
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