A. Ponzo illusion
B. Necker illusion
C. phi-phenomenon
D. induced movement effect
Related Mcqs:
- The sequentially flashing Christmas tree lights appeared to generate pulsating waves of motion. This best illustrates:
A. Visual capture
B. Relative motion
C. Retinal disparity
D. The phi phenomenon - A stationary point of light when viewed in an otherwise totally dark room appears to move. This is an example of ________________?
A. apparent motion
B. induced motion
C. the autokinetic effect
D. binocular disparity - As Babra drove down the highway, the pickets of the fences moved past her in a blur, but the mountains in the distance didn’t appear to move at all. Babra was experiencing:
A. The binocular cue for depth called convergence
B. The monocular cue for depth called linear perspective
C. The pictorial cue for depth called texture gradient
D. The monocular cue for depth called motion parallax - A string of lights is flashed in sequence. We perceive the situation as a light that moves along the string. This is a demonstration of _______________?
A. location constancy
B. brightness constancy
C. the phi phenomenon
D. binocular disparity - If you project a red, a green, and a blue light into space, the point at which the three lights cross will lead to the perception of:
A. Ultraviolet light
B. White light
C. Orange light
D. Infrared light - The light around the movie marquee flashed on-and-off in succession However, Jamil did not perceive them as separate lights flashing, but instead saw a continuous band of light moving around the edge of the marquee. Jamil’s perception illustrates:
A. Feature detection.
B. Bottom-up processing
C. Pre-attentive processing
D. The phi phenomenon - As we move, viewed objects cast changing shapes on our retinas, although we do not perceive the objects as changing. This is part of the phenomenon of ________________?
A. perceptual consistency
B. relative motion
C. linear perspective
D. continuity - You see a photograph showing a man, a woman and a car. The two people appear closer to you than the car does because they obscure part of it. This depth cue is called ______________?
A. eye convergence
B. linear perspective
C. relative image size of familiar objects
D. occlusion - When travelling car, near objects seem to move past you faster than distant objects. This is called:
A. aerial perspective
B. linear perspective
C. relative size
D. relative motion - When a child understands that reversible changes in the appearance of an object do not change fundamental properties such as number, width and volume, the child has achieved _______________?
A. conservation
B. egocentrism
C. hypothetic-deductive reasoning
D. an understanding of cause-and-effect relations