Before proceeding with the next lesson review your knowledge. If you are unsure of any of the answers, review Lesson 3 notes.
1. ___________ was the first scientist to link colour and the human eye suggesting that the eye had 3 different light-sensitive materials that created colour.
a. Alfred Moster
b. Thomas Young
c. Eleanor Rosen
d. Peter D. Edelstein2. It is the theory that there are 3 different kinds of photoreceptors in the eye- each one specifically sensitive to one particular colour
a. The Young-Helmholtz theory
b. Three-Components Theory
c. Trichromatic Theory
d. all of the above3. Every colour of light can be made with these basic colours:
a. red, yellow, blue
b. red, yellow, green
c. red, green, blue
d. cyan, yellow, purple4. When light of different colour frequencies is mixed, colour becomes whiter- this colour mixing is called
a. subtractive
b. additive
c. whitening
d. apositive5. Equal amounts of red, green and blue light create
a. yellow light
b. black light
c. purple light
d. white light6. Red light+ green light=
a. yellow
b. blue
c. purple
d. white7. Complementary colours are any two colours when mixed together create
a. a primary colour
b. white light
c. green
d. yellow8. Subtractive colour is
a. the theory that there are 3 different kinds of photoreceptors in the eye
b. when light of different colour frequencies is mixed, colour becomes whiter
c. when paints are mixed the colours absorb every colour except the wavelength that we see reflected back
d. the tendency for a color to look the same under widely different viewing conditions9. ___________ is used in offset printing where four colours (magenta, yellow, cyan and black) are used to create photographs and illustrations on paper
a. Photosynthetic colour
b. Subtractive colour
c. Polychromatic colour
d. Additive colour10. The tendency for a colour to look the same under widely different viewing conditions is called
a. colour correction
b. retinal reduction
c. colour constancy
d. subtractive colour11. The ___________ method assumes that perception of colour is result of various wavelengths stimulating cones on retina
a. objective
b. comparative
c. subjective
d. deconstructive
12. Colours are compared to visual objects or impressions. This is which method to discuss colour
a. objective
b. comparative
c. subjective
d. deconstructive13. A person's mental state or association with a coloured object affects the emotional response of the message. This is which method
a. objective
b. comparative
c. subjective
d. deconstructive14. _________ defines the outside edges of an object and has three parts: dots, lines and shapes
a. Form
b. Movement
c. Colour
d. Wavelength15. _________ figure in halftone process that allows printing of photographs
a. lines
b. shapes
c. colours
d. dots16. Which of the following is not true about lines
a. lines in pictures can evoke emotions
b. a TV screen is a collection of phosphor-filled red, green and blue lines
c. a straight line conveys stiffness
d. diagonal lines stimulate17. He measured the speed of impulses in the nervous system
a. Thomas Young
b. Hermann von Helmholtz
c. Paul Martin Lester
d. Ogdon Maxwell18. It is the frame where an image is located
a. Interposition
b. Textural spot
c. Space
d. Form19. Which set below has one or more elements that are not depth cues
a. space, size, colour
b. lighting, textural gradients, interposition
c. time, illusionary perspective, geometric perspective
d. conceptual perspective, movement, darkness20. It refers to the way in which objects appear to the eye based on their spatial attributes, or their dimensions and the position of the eye relative to the objects.
a. perspective
b. interposition
c. space
d. gradient21. A culture that emphasizes______ will place close objects on same level as distant objects.
a. the future
b. the past
c. the present
d. the material22. It is the placement of one object in front of another to give illusion of depth
a. perspective
b. polymorphism
c. gradient
d. interposition23. The ripple of a pond is an example of
a. interposition
b. perspective
c. textural gradient
d. exposition24. Which of the following is incorrect about colour and depth
a. an object's colour can communicate depth
b. warm colour appear closer
c. high contrast picture seems closer
d. cool does not appear farther25. The parallel lines of a railway track are perceived by the eye of a standing human being as meeting at a distant point at the horizon. This is an example of
a. perspective
b. interposition
c. parallelism
d. objectification26. Where the most important person is larger in size than the others or manipulating the view by shooting a camera from below and looking up to make the object appear more imposing. This is an example of
a. geometric perspective
b. conceptual perspective
c. Illusionary perspective
d. interposition27. We see an object photographed beside a ruler to understand which depth cue
a. size
b. perspective
c. gradient
d. interposition28. There are four types of movement:
a. real, conceptual, implied, geographical
b. interposition, running, slight, slow
c. real, apparent, graphic, implied
d. flying, running, walking, dancing29. This type of movement is not connected with a picture, it's actual. It is
a. applied
b. real
c. graphic
d. apparent30. It can be the motion of the eyes as they scan a field of view, how eyes move through a layout; we view based on previous experiences- eye will follow a line, a curve. This is which type of movement
a. applied
b. real
c. graphic
d. apparent31. A motion that viewer perceives in a still image without movement of the object is which type of movement
a. implied
b. real
c. graphic
d. apparent32. It is also called illusionary movement and is a type of movement where a stationary object appears to move; example-motion pictures; it's really just a series of stills. It is
a. implied
b. real
c. graphic
d. apparent