| perception |
The reader's insight or comprehension of a text. From different critical perspectives, the reader's perception of meaning can be a passive receipt, an active discovery, or a creative construction. Thus, formalists argue that a literary work's meaning is not a product of the reader but the achieved content of the text. Structuralist, reader-response critics, and even socio-historical commentators attribute a more active role for the reader.
Ãâó: www2.cumberlandcollege.edu/acad/english/litcritweb...
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| perception |
the way in which individuals analyse and interpret incoming information and make sense of it.
Ãâó: wps.pearsoned.co.uk/wps/media/objects/1452/1487687...
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| perception |
An awareness of. It is impossible to determine when animals first become aware of an object or event; therefore, visible signs of perception are measured by lifting, or training animals to perform a specific task, such as pressing a lever, in response to stimulus.
Ãâó: www.egr.msu.edu/age/MAEC/definiitons.htm
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| perception |
The psychological ability to process or use information received through the sense organs.
Ãâó: www.upei.ca/~xliu/measurement/glossary.htm
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| perception |
Perception is more than the sum of all the sensory input supplied by our eyes, ears and other receptors. It is the active selection, organization, and interpretation of such input.
Ãâó: www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/docs/social/psych30/Glossary....
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