Perception and Processing
Attention and Awareness
Gestalt Principles and Depth Cues
Cognition and Problem Solving
Heuristics and Biases
100

The process by which we organize and interpret sensory information.

What is perception?

100

Focusing on one specific stimulus while filtering out others.

What is selective attention?

100

This Gestalt principle allows you to see an image as a distinct object against its background.

What is figure–ground?

100

A mental framework used to organize and interpret information.

What is a schema?

100

A thinking shortcut that helps us make decisions quickly but can lead to mistakes.

What is a heuristic?

200

This type of processing is driven by prior experiences and expectations.

What is top-down processing?

200

Hearing your name in a crowded cafeteria is an example of this effect.

What is the cocktail party effect?

200

We tend to group objects that are close together.

What is proximity?

200

Incorporating new information into existing schemas.

What is assimilation?

200

Judging the likelihood of events based on how easily examples come to mind.

What is the availability heuristic?

300

When you recognize a song by hearing each individual note for the first time, you’re using this type of processing.

What is bottom-up processing?

300

Missing an obvious event because your attention is directed elsewhere.

What is inattentional blindness?

300

The principle that makes you see an incomplete shape as a whole.

What is closure?

300

Changing existing schemas to adapt to new information.

What is accommodation?

300

Judging something based on how well it matches your mental prototype.

What is the representativeness heuristic?

400

Interpreting a vague stimulus as a ghost because you expect to see one is an example of what concept?

What is a perceptual set?

400

When small changes go unnoticed because attention shifts during a visual disruption.

What is change blindness?

400

Two lines that appear to meet in the distance create a sense of depth through this cue.

What is linear perspective?

400

A step-by-step process that guarantees a solution.

What is an algorithm?

400

Believing you “knew it all along” after an event occurs.

What is hindsight bias?

500

Perceiving an object as the same color or size even when light or distance changes is known as what?

What is perceptual constancy?

500

Why do complex tasks become more difficult when we divide our attention?

Because attention is limited, and divided attention reduces processing accuracy.

500

The slight difference between the images seen by each eye that helps us perceive depth.

What is retinal disparity? 

500

The tendency to see objects as having only one function, such as using a shoe only for wearing.

What is functional fixedness?

500

Deciding differently when information is presented as a gain (“95% success”) versus a loss (“5% failure”).

What is framing?

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