good continuation

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good continuation

A child follows the good continuation of a winding garden path.

Definition

Noun: 1. A Gestalt principle of perception: "Good continuation" is a principle stating that elements arranged in a straight or smoothly curving line are perceived as belonging together and as a single, continuous unit, rather than as separate, disconnected parts. The mind prefers to see lines and patterns as continuing along their established path.

Usage
  • In Psychology and Design: The term is used primarily in the fields of visual perception, psychology, and design to explain how humans organize visual information.
    • The designer used the principle of good continuation to guide the viewer's eye across the page.
    • Even when partially obscured, we perceive the rope as a single line due to good continuation.
Advanced Usage
  • As a perceptual law: It is one of several "Gestalt laws of grouping" that describe how the human brain naturally structures sensory input.
    • The law of good continuation explains why we see the two crossing lines as an 'X' instead of two 'V' shapes touching at their points.
Variants and Related Words
  • Continuation (n): The act of continuing or the state of being continued.
    • The continuation of the road was blocked by a fallen tree.
  • Law of Continuity: Another name for the principle of good continuation.
Synonyms
  • Law of Continuity
  • Principle of Continuity
Related Concepts (Not Phrasal Verbs or Idioms)
  • Gestalt Psychology: The school of thought that emphasizes the brain's tendency to perceive whole patterns.
  • Figure-Ground: Another Gestalt principle concerning the separation of an object (figure) from its background (ground).
  • Closure: The tendency to perceive incomplete figures as complete.
  • Proximity: The tendency to group elements that are close to each other.
good continuation

A child follows the good continuation of a winding garden path.

Noun
  1. a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there is an innate tendency to perceive a line as continuing its established direction