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  2. Apophenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apophenia

    Apophenia (/ æ p oʊ ˈ f iː n i ə /) is the tendency to perceive meaningful connections between unrelated things. [1]The term (German: Apophänie from the Greek verb ἀποφαίνειν (apophaínein)) was coined by psychiatrist Klaus Conrad in his 1958 publication on the beginning stages of schizophrenia.

  3. Pareidolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia

    Satellite photograph of a mesa in the Cydonia region of Mars, often called the "Face on Mars" and cited as evidence of extraterrestrial habitation. Pareidolia (/ ˌ p ær ɪ ˈ d oʊ l i ə, ˌ p ɛər-/; [1] also US: / ˌ p ɛər aɪ-/) [2] is the tendency for perception to impose a meaningful interpretation on a nebulous stimulus, usually visual, so that one detects an object, pattern, or ...

  4. Pattern recognition (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_recognition...

    The human tendency to see patterns that do not actually exist is called apophenia. Examples include the Man in the Moon, faces or figures in shadows, in clouds, and in patterns with no deliberate design, such as the swirls on a baked confection, and the perception of causal relationships between events which are, in fact, unrelated.

  5. Infographic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infographic

    [1] [2] They can improve cognition by using graphics to enhance the human visual system's ability to see patterns and trends. [3] [4] Similar pursuits are information visualization, data visualization, statistical graphics, information design, or information architecture. [2]

  6. Principles of grouping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principles_of_grouping

    The principles of grouping (or Gestalt laws of grouping) are a set of principles in psychology, first proposed by Gestalt psychologists to account for the observation that humans naturally perceive objects as organized patterns and objects, a principle known as Prägnanz. Gestalt psychologists argued that these principles exist because the mind ...

  7. Visual thinking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_thinking

    Spatial visualization ability is the ability to manipulate mentally two- and three-dimensional figures. [ 1 ] Spatial-temporal reasoning is prominent among visual thinkers as well as among kinesthetic learners (those who learn through movement, physical patterning and doing) and logical thinkers (mathematical thinkers who think in patterns and ...

  8. Could AI 'Rewrite' Human Identity in 2025? Reconciling Chaos ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/could-ai-rewrite-human...

    Systemic thinking, the ability to grasp interdependencies, creativity in unstructured tasks, empathy in human-to-human connections—these are the focal points of a future labor paradigm that ...

  9. Human intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_intelligence

    Human intelligence is the intellectual ... (see the article on ... synthesize, and think with visual patterns, including the ability to store and recall visual ...