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Moore and egeth (1997) asked participants to rate which of two lines was longer. background dots were presented with the lines. on some trials, the dot pattern was a visual illusion, designed to manipulate the perceived length of the lines. moore and egeth found that

User Bling
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Moore and Egret (1997) asked participants to rate which of two lines was longer. background dots were presented with the lines. On some trials, the dot pattern was a visual illusion, designed to manipulate the perceived length of the lines. Moore and Egeth found that one can be affected by events one isn't conscious of.

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Moore and Egeth found that "one can be affected by events one isn't conscious of".

Numerous hypotheses of visual perception accept that before consideration is distributed inside a scene, visual data is parsed by the Gestalt principles of organization. This assumption has been tested by investigations in which members were not able recognize what Gestalt grouping patterns had happened out of sight of essential undertaking shows.


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