Visual Capture
Psychology, Visual perception, Sense, Perception
978-613-9-16517-9
6139165172
76
2012-01-06
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In psychology, visual capture is the dominance of vision over other sense modalities in creating a percept. The phrase (in French, captation visuelle) was coined by Frenchman J. Tastevin after he studied the tactile Aristotle illusion in 1937. One example of visual capture is known as the "ventriloquism effect," which refers to the perception of speech sounds as coming from a direction other than their true direction, due to the influence of visual stimuli from an apparent speaker. Thus, when the ventriloquism illusion occurs, the speaker's voice is visually captured at the location of the dummy's moving mouth (rather than the speaker's carefully unmoving mouth).
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