Depth and Visual Cues
Gestalt and Perceptual Organization
Color Vision
Motion and the Brain
Brain & Eye Movements
100

This depth cue happens when one object blocks part of another, signaling that the blocked object is farther away.

What is occlusion?

100

 This term refers to the process of separating elements in a visual scene and organizing them into groups.

What are segregation and grouping?

100

This theory states that color vision depends on three types of receptors sensitive to different wavelengths.

What is the trichromatic theory?

100

Perceiving movement when nothing is actually moving is called this type of motion.

What is illusory motion?

100

This lobe of the brain is crucial for visually guided actions like reaching and navigation.

What is the parietal lobe?

200

These depth cues come from comparing the slightly different images seen by each eye.

What are binocular cues?

200

This is NOT a Gestalt principle of grouping but instead refers to a disorder involving object recognition.

What is agnosia?

200

Seeing a green object appear greener when surrounded by red is explained by this theory.

What is the opponent-process theory?

200

This visual brain area (also called MT) is essential for detecting motion.

 What is V5?

200

 Rapid eye movements that jump from one point of focus to another are called these.

What are saccades?

300

Name the three sources of information our visual system uses to perceive depth.

What are monocular cues, oculomotor cues, and binocular cues?

300

This perceptual process uses prior knowledge and expectations to interpret what we see.

What is top-down processing?

300

 Hue, saturation, and brightness are the three dimensions of color experience — this option is NOT one of them.

What is constancy?

300

These neurons activate both when we perform an action and when we watch someone else perform it.

What are mirror neurons?

300

This theory states that the feedback we get from our eye muscles as our eyes track an object is important to the perception of motion

Corollary discharge theory

400

This motion-based depth cue occurs when objects appear to move at different speeds as you move forward or backward.

What is optic flow?

400

This theory states that color vision depends on three types of receptors sensitive to different wavelengths.

What is the trichromatic theory?

400

True or False — One theory alone fully explains how we see color.

What is false?

400

Term used in social neuroscience to refer to the unique visual phenomenon of a moving, animate creature

Biological Motion

400

An eye movement that has much slower tracking movements of the eyes designed to keep a moving stimulus on the fovea

Smooth-pursuit movements

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