A. motivation
B. past experience
C. size
D. expectation
Related Mcqs:
- Which of the following is true of personal construct theory? 1: George Kelly developed personal construct theory to examine how individuals view the world. 2: Personal construct theory portrays people as victims of unconscious desires and impulses. 3: Personal construct theory does not try to locate the individual on the personality theorists, dimensions. 4: Kelly basically took the view that we are all artists.
A. 1 & 2
B. 3 & 4
C. 1 & 3
D. 2 & 4 - Which one of the following is not the law of perceptual grouping?
A. Continuation
B. Similarity constancy
C. Constancy
D. Proximity
E. None of these - The most fundamental principle of perceptual organization is called the___________?
A. Figure-ground relationship
B. Volley principle
C. Dark adaptation phenomenon
D. Law of closure
E. None of these - The major laws of perceptual organization were developed by the __________________?
A. Gestaltists
B. Phenomenologists
C. Cognitivists
D. Transactionalist - The most fundamental principle of perceptual organization is called ________________?
A. figure and ground
B. law of closure
C. consistency
D. dark adaptation phenomenon - What is not an example of perceptual constancy?
A. size
B. shape
C. color
D. dimension - The best studied perceptual constancies include ________________?
A. brightness, focus, angle
B. shape, location, size
C. color, texture, content
D. size, age, weight - The perceptual processes that make use of preexisting knowledge to interpret new information are called _______________?
A. sensory processes
B. top-down processes
C. bottom-up processes
D. parallel processes - This is not a law of perceptual organization _________________?
A. proximity
B. closure
C. continuity
D. simplicity - Perceptual adaptation refers to the:
A. Grouping of stimuli into smooth, uninterrupted patterns
B. Perception of an object as unchanging in shape regardless of our own viewing angle
C. Tendency for novel or unfamiliar stimuli to capture our attention
D. Perceptual adjustment to an artificially displaced visual field