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tachistoscope
[ tuh-kis-tuh-skohp ]
noun
Psychology.
- an apparatus for use in exposing visual stimuli, as pictures, letters, or words, for an extremely brief period, used chiefly to assess visual perception or to increase reading speed.
tachistoscope
/ t蓹藢k瑟st蓹藞sk蓲p瑟k; t蓹藞k瑟st蓹藢sk蓹蕣p /
noun
- an instrument, used mainly in experiments on perception and memory, for displaying visual images for very brief intervals, usually a fraction of a second
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Derived Forms
- 迟补藢肠丑颈蝉迟辞藞蝉肠辞辫颈肠补濒濒测, adverb
- tachistoscopic, adjective
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Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 迟补路肠丑颈蝉路迟辞路蝉肠辞辫路颈肠 [t, uh, -kis-t, uh, -, skop, -ik], adjective
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of tachistoscope1
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of tachistoscope1
C20: from Greek takhistos swiftest (see tachy- ) + -scope
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
Gadi Geiger and Jerome Lettvin, cognitive scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, used a mechanical shutter, called a tachistoscope, to briefly flash a row of letters extending from the center of a subject鈥檚 field of vision out to its perimeter.
From
W.J. came into the Sperry lab from his home in Southern California to find Gazzaniga waiting with a tachistoscope, a device that could present visual stimuli for specific periods of time鈥攁nd, crucially, could present a stimulus to the right side or the left side of each eye separately.
From
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