When someone has watched something they stop seeing details until the end of the show.
Where is somebody watching trees go past out of a window looking for something they might stop noticing details and then miss what they are looking for because they have become accustomed to the mass of detail going past them?
What was put in the Terms and Services section to describe this? Word or phrase
are made to represent or describe the specific person or an individual.
Tunnel vision
Meaning “to loss peripheral vision with retention of central vision”. Hyperbole is the emotion to describe someone who is so focused that they start missing details.
Tunnel vision
Meaning “to loss peripheral vision with retention of central vision”. Hyperbole is the emotion to describe someone who is so focused that they start missing details.
And she eyes glazed
over. Why is this the case: “As an elderly female I was staring at a puzzle for so long that my eyes glazed over. “This term is commonly used to describe boredom or tiredness. “Even after an hour of looking at his travel pictures, each one accompanied by a long explanation, my eyes glaze over and my mind went numb.” Is
it a standard word and a term (e.g. eye-glazing)? Why isn’t it available in English dictionaries?
What happened last night at The Occasion?
Is there anyone who had inattentional blindness? What happens when your focus on one aspect of something is so lost that you lose the ability to see unrelated or unexpected things. Is it possible to see the effect of artificial photosynthesis by studying real-life cases, such as the
following video?
White-line fever
Generally when you’re driving at night, and unable to focus / keep it together because of staring too much at the white-lines.
Sensory Overload
Technical term for this. Why is irritability only one of the possible results, but
I can actually feel your emotions, too?
Besides the suggestions already given, you could say they’d zoned out. Not
how hard it is to get.
I became blind to what was in front of me. For what reason — in this case a
complex series of chemical responses in your brain — you
didn’t pay any real attention, and it’s quite as tragic as a human being falling out.
What neuroscience psychologists use for habituation? Wikipedia describes it as:
a form of learning in which an organism decreases or ceases to respond after repeated presentations. What are the traits of an organism that stop responding to a stimulus that no longer biologically relevant? 1 As an organism, they may habituate to repeated sounds, but learning these have no consequences, and so on. Habituation usually refers to a reduction in innate behaviours, rather than behaviours developed during conditioning, in which the process is termed “extinction”.
What advice would you give to your gypsy friend for a good day?
When the monotonous mass of details becomes background noise, the real
world becomes a noise.