The subject-matter of this class covered all the bases. It seems very specific, learning advanced technical terms at some points, and general at others times, like how essentially we learned about the physiology of all five human senses. This textbook had a very critical way of putting into words what we all of us have already experienced and known about. For example, I had an "AH HAH" moment when reading Chapter 10 about perceiving size and the Holoway and Boring Experiment. The section basically described the concept of the visual angle and how the same visual angle of two different objects leads to the perception by the observer that the objects are of the same size, when really they may not be. Figure 10.30 (page 246) is a picture of someone's hands looking like they are "pinching" the Eiffel Tower in France.
Through college, I have seen so many Facebook albums of my friends abroad all over the world, all of them posing with famous monuments in this humerous fashion. I perused Facebook looking for these kinds of photos (being a college student, it was obviously an unwelcome, irregular task to sit on Facebook for a few hours). Here I have posted pictures of friends, travelling the world, demonstrating the concept of a visual angle and the tricks it can play in photography. I now know what is going on in these pictures, and how the angles work in convincing the brain of these unreal sizes of the monuments.
I like that you incorporated your personal pictures, I also enjoy taking pictures like this :)
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