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  2. Visual perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_perception

    Visual perception is the ability to interpret the surrounding environment through photopic vision (daytime vision), color vision, scotopic vision (night vision), and mesopic vision (twilight vision), using light in the visible spectrum reflected by objects in the environment.

  3. International Affective Picture System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Affective...

    The International Affective Picture System (IAPS) is a database of pictures designed to provide a standardized set of pictures for studying emotion and attention [1] that has been widely used in psychological research. [2] The IAPS was developed by the National Institute of Mental Health Center for Emotion and Attention at the University of ...

  4. Synesthesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synesthesia

    For example, someone with auditory–tactile synesthesia may experience that hearing a specific word or sound feels like touch in one specific part of the body or may experience that certain sounds can create a sensation in the skin without being touched (not to be confused with the milder general reaction known as frisson, which affects ...

  5. Visual capture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_capture

    This means that when the stimuli producing the sound as well as vision are close together, there seems to be a direct relationship formed in the perception of these separate stimuli, that correlate them into the same sensation. [11] Another example of visual capture comes from Ehrsson, Spense, & Passingham (2004) who used a rubber hand to prove ...

  6. Emotion perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion_perception

    Emotion perception refers to the capacities and abilities of recognizing and identifying emotions in others, in addition to biological and physiological processes involved. . Emotions are typically viewed as having three components: subjective experience, physical changes, and cognitive appraisal; emotion perception is the ability to make accurate decisions about another's subjective ...

  7. Perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perception

    For example, the Rubin vase can be interpreted either as a vase or as two faces. The percept can bind sensations from multiple senses into a whole. A picture of a talking person on a television screen, for example, is bound to the sound of speech from speakers to form a percept of a talking person.

  8. Sense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sense

    For example, information from one sense has the potential to influence how information from another is perceived. [7] Sensation and perception are studied by a variety of related fields, most notably psychophysics, neurobiology, cognitive psychology, and cognitive science.

  9. Alliesthesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliesthesia

    Alliesthesia (from Ancient Greek: ἀλλοῖος, romanized: alloios – be changed, and αἴσθησις (aísthēsis) – sensation, perception; thus "changed sensation"; French: alliesthésie, German: Alliästhesie) is a psychophysiological phenomenon (not to be confused with the pathologic symptom of allesthesia) that describes the ...