A. convergence
B. continuity
C. interposition
D. closure
Related Mcqs:
- Which of the following is a cue used by artists to convey depth on a flat canvas?
A. Interposition
B. Connectedness
C. Convergence
D. Continuity - Which of the following is a cue used by artists to convey depth on a flat canvas?
A. interposition
B. connectedness
C. convergence
D. continuity - If you slowly bring your finger toward your face until it eventually touches your nose, eye-muscle cues called ________________ convey depth information to your brain?
A. retinal disparity
B. interposition
C. continuity
D. convergence - Which of the following constitutes monocular depth cues?
A. relative size
B. linear perspective
C. interposition
D. all of the above - Which of the following depth cues creates the impression of visual cliff?
A. interposition
B. relative height
C. linear perspective
D. texture gradient - All of the following are monocular cues for depth perception EXCEPT:
A. Relative size
B. Retinal disparity
C. Linear perspective
D. Texture gradient - Among monocular cues for depth perception is ________________?
A. convergence
B. retinal disparity
C. assimilation
D. interposition - Not among stimulus cues that can aid perception of depth is ___________________?
A. texture
B. light and shadow
C. convergence
D. linear perspective - Prominent among monocular depth cues is ___________________?
A. texture-density gradient
B. retinal disparity
C. reciprocal innervations
D. retinal polarity - 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)