Blue paint looks blue because it does this to shorter wavelengths of light.
What is reflects?
This depth cue is based on the slightly different retinal images in our two eyes.
What is binocular disparity?
In the context of MAE, the concept of motion contrast is similar to this.
What are opponent color circuits?
In the context of attention to features, when the target feature "pops out" of the display, the participant is conducting this kind of search.
What is a feature search?
The color solid varies this in the vertical dimension.
If a white light is shone onto a surface that only reflects wavelengths below 500 nm, the surface will appear to be this color.
What is blue?
These are the cues that provide information about depth on the basis of the position of objects in the retinal image, the size of objects in the retinal image, and the effects of lighting in the retinal image.
What are static monocular depth cues?
These eye movements occur when a person tracks a moving object.
What are smooth pursuit?
This type of attentional control is involuntary.
What is bottom-up?
Confusing the colors of two shapes you saw on a sign when you drove by illustrates this problem.
What is the binding problem?
Julie is making slime with her kids. She starts with white, and in order to create green slime, she adds blue and yellow food coloring. This process of creating green is this kind of color mixing.
What is subtractive?
These are the static, position-based depth cues.
What are partial occlusion and relative height?
In the context of neural basis of motion perception in area V1 and area MT, this kind of tuning is determined by the length of a delay in the transmission of signals from Neuron 1 or Neuron 2.
What is speed?
This is the failure to perceive a fully visible but unattended visual object.
What is inattentional blindness?
This principle demonstrates that color vision depends on the relative responses of the various types of cones.
What is the principle of univariance?
This is a heterochromatic light source that contains proportionately more long-wavelength light than sunlight does.
What is incandescent?
The difference in the speed and direction with which objects appear to move in the retinal image as an observer moves within a scene provide this depth cue.
What is motion parallax?
While reading, this prevents a blur on the retina.
What is saccadic suppresion?
According to Broadbent's filter theory of attention, sensory information is registered as physical signals and attention selects only some of those signals to be interpreted for meaning, while the others are this.
What is discarded?
This brain region controls the direction of visual attention.
What is the FEF (frontal eye field)?
A person suffering from protanopia lacks these.
What are L-cones?
Objects that are either closer to an observer or farther away from the observer than the horopter will project retinal images that fall at these points.
What are noncorresponding points?
In principle, the information in the CDS could be more useful than information from the extraocular muscles because the CDS would be sent at this time.
What is before the eyes move?
This is the ability to point to and sometimes discriminate visual stimuli without conscious awareness.
What is blindsight?
This is the critical function of neurons in area MT.
What is motion perception?