A | B |
 | Necker Cube |
The tendency to look at the whole by filling in gaps in a perceptual field,  | Closure |
The tendency to perceive that movement of an object continues once it appears to move in a particular direction,  | Continuity |
 | Showed that shape was most important in answering "What is it?" |
 | Figure Ground |
You probably perceived this image as that of three overlapping squares rather than as two six-sided objects and one four-sided object.,  | Law of Pragnanze |
The tendency to place objects that are physically close to each other in a group,  | Proximity |
We perceive objects of similar size, shape, or color as a unit or a figure,  | Similarity |
When they are uniformed and linked, we perceive spots, lines, or areas as a single unit. | Connectedness |
At any moment we focus our awareness on only a limited aspect of all that we are capable of experiencing. | Selective Attention |
the ability to attend selectively to only one voice among many. | Cocktail party effect |
we view things as a unified whole or figure | Gestalt |