Difference Threshold
The minimum difference in stimulus intensity that a person can detect, also known as the just noticeable difference (JND).
The minimum difference in stimulus intensity that a person can detect, also known as the just noticeable difference (JND).
The tendency to perceive and interpret information based on prior experiences and expectations, influencing how different users perceive design differently.
A Gestalt principle that states objects that are close to each other tend to be perceived as a group.
The perception of objects as unchanging despite changes in sensory input, such as changes in lighting, distance, or angle.
A key aspect of Gestalt psychology describing the mind's ability to fill in gaps to create a whole object from incomplete elements.
A set of principles describing how the human mind organizes visual information into meaningful wholes.
A phenomenon where vivid mental images can interfere with actual perception, causing individuals to mistake imagined experiences for real ones.
A phenomenon where people fail to recognize a repeated item in a visual sequence, impacting information processing and perception.
A key aspect of Gestalt psychology that explains the tendency for ambiguous images to pop back and forth unstably between alternative interpretations in the mind.