A. Recurrent processing model
B. Serial processing model
C. Parallel processing model
D. Selective adaptation model
Related Mcqs:
- Sometimes the visual information available to us about a stimulus is ambiguous because of differences in depth, lighting or shading cues. For example, patterns of shading can create the illusion of objects as protruding from a visual field. How do we make sense of the visual information to recognize ambiguous stimuli?
A. Visual system relies on other people’s Knowledge of objects to identify ambiguous stimuli
B. Visual information about protruding objects is impossible to process
C. Visual system relies on assumptions about the physical world to identify ambiguous stimuli
D. Both (a) and (c) - The visual perceived distance between ourselves and an object provides an important cue for our perception of the objects:
A. motion
B. size
C. color
D. brightness - Which of the following statements relating to the stages in Freud’s psychogenetic model of development matches up with Freud’s suggestions?Which of the following statements relating to the stages in Freud’s psychogenetic model of development matches up with Freud’s suggestions?
A. At an early oral stage children usually start to explore their environment but experience control and discipline from their parents
B. Fixation at the anal stage results in children deriving pleasure in adulthood from activities such as overeating, smoking, drinking and kissing
C. At the genital stage children discover pleasure from touching their genitals
D. During the latency period sexual impulses are rechanneled into activities such as sport, learning and social activities - The visually perceived distance between ourselves and an object provides an important cue for our perception of the object’s:
A. motion
B. size
C. color
D. brightness - According to groundbreaking research, how do attentional processes affect perceptual processing of information?
A. Attention create a parallel processing of all visual input
B. All the visual stimuli fully processed and then attention acts on this information
C. Attentional processes act early to select a small part of visual input to fully process
D. Attention is not a critical component of the processing of visual information - A visual scene can be separated into two parts, the ______________ which is the object that commands our attention, and the ____________ which seems to exist continuously behind the object?
A. figure, ground
B. good form, good continuation
C. ground, background
D. good form, circumscription - The collection of rod and cone receptors that funnel signals to a particular visual cell in the retina make up that cell’s:
A. blind spot
B. optic disk
C. opponent process field
D. receptive field - The collection of rod and cone receptors that funnel signals to a particular visual cell in the retina make up that cell’s:
A. blind spot
B. optic disk
C. opponent process field
D. receptive field - Brain cells that analyze incoming sensory information into lines, angles, shading, and movement are called:
A. Sight cells
B. Second stage sensors
C. Feature detectors
D. Vision neurons - One subject partially blocks your view of a second object and, therefore, the first object is seen as being closer to you than the second object. This is an example of ________________?
A. relative size
B. good continuation
C. interposition
D. the Poggendroff illusion