SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Animation
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
it-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The earliest elementary form of this device was created in China around 180 AD. The modern device was produced in 1834. The device is essentially a cylinder with vertical slits around the sides. Around the inside edge of the cylinder there are a seri
Sullivan (2 February 1887 - 15 February 1933)
Zoetrope
Persistence of Vision
Slow in and slow out
2. In typography - it is the process of uniformly increasing or decreasing the space between all letters in a block of text.
Keyframe
Tracking
Starevich (August 8 - 1882 - February 26 - 1965)
Secondary action
3. Where a character starts to move and parts of him take a few frames to catch up.
Drag
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Leading
Post-synchronous sound
4. This is an acclaimed book - 1981 - by Ollie Johnston and Frank Thomas. It is widely considered to be one of the best books ever published on the topic of character animation.
Thaumatrope
Fleischer (July 19 - 1883 - September 11 - 1972)
The Illusion of Life
Serif
5. An 1908 French animated film by Amile Cohl. It is one of the earliest examples of traditional (hand-drawn) animation - and considered by film historians to be the first animated cartoon.
Mutoscope
McCay (September 26 - 1869 - July 26 - 1934)
Universal Theme
Fantasmagorie
6. They have a beginning (setup) middle (conflict) and end (resolution). Oftentimes - in the end the character achieves the goal and better understands themselves.
Appeal
Story Arcs
Fantasmagorie
Follow through and overlapping action
7. A sound-track or music that has not been carefully timed to fit the picture. Music and animation are both "time arts" and will thus eventually synchronize at random points.
Non-synchronous sound
Follow through and overlapping action
Fleischer (July 19 - 1883 - September 11 - 1972)
Story Arcs
8. Used to prepare the audience for an action and to make the action appear more realistic. For example a dancer jumping off the floor has to bend his knees first; a golfer making a swing has to swing the club back first. For special effect - can be omi
Post-synchronous sound
Sullivan (2 February 1887 - 15 February 1933)
Secondary action
Anticipation
9. Used to prepare the audience for an action - and to make the action appear more realistic. A dancer jumping off the floor has to bend his knees first; a golfer making a swing has to swing the club back first. The technique can also be used for less p
Keyframe
Staging
Anticipation
Appeal
10. Directs the audience's attention and makes it clear what is of greatest importance in a scene. Presents the idea in a complete and unmistakable method. Keeps the focus on what is relevant and avoids unnecessary detail.
Arcs
Multi-plane Camera
Follow through and overlapping action
Staging
11. A Russian and French stop-motion animator who used insects and other animals as his protagonists.
Exaggeration
Starevich (August 8 - 1882 - February 26 - 1965)
Timing
Non-synchronous sound
12. The most important principle is this - the purpose of which is to give a sense of weight and flexibility to drawn objects. It can be applied to simple objects - like a bouncing ball - or more complex constructions - like the musculature of a human fa
Kinetoscope
Squash and Stretch
Universal Theme
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
13. Considered the most important principle. Gives a sense of weight and flexibility to drawn objects - In realistic animation - the most important aspect of this principle is the fact that an object's volume does not change when the effect is applied. I
Squash and Stretch
Magic Lantern
Tracking
Universal Theme
14. An early motion picture exhibition device. Though not a movie projector—it was designed for films to be viewed individually through the window of a cabinet housing its components—it introduced the basic approach that would become the standard for all
Kinetoscope
Cohl (January 4 - 1857 - January 20 - 1938)
Blocking
Staging
15. A book with a series of pictures that vary gradually from one page to the next - so that when the pages are turned rapidly - the pictures appear to animate by simulating motion or some other change.
Leading
Flip book
Pre-synchronous sound
Disney (December 5 - 1901 - December 15 - 1966)
16. Adding these to the main action gives a scene more life - and can help to support the main action. A person walking can simultaneously swing his arms or keep them in his pockets - he can speak or whistle - or he can express emotions through facial ex
Cohl (January 4 - 1857 - January 20 - 1938)
Universal Theme
Secondary action
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
17. An early motion picture device that provided viewing to one person at a time. Worked on the same principle as the flip book. Quickly dominated the coin-in-the-slot "peep-show" business.
Disney (December 5 - 1901 - December 15 - 1966)
Mutoscope
Serif
Fleischer (July 19 - 1883 - September 11 - 1972)
18. An animation technique to make a physically manipulated object appear to move on its own. The object is moved in small increments between individually photographed frames - creating the illusion of movement when the series of frames is played as a co
Stop motion
Phenakistoscope
Secondary action
Magic Lantern
19. An American cartoonist and animator. His pioneering early animated films far outshone the work of his contemporaries - and set a standard followed by Walt Disney and others in later decades. His two best-known creations are the newspaper comic strip
McCay (September 26 - 1869 - July 26 - 1934)
Steamboat Willie
Stop motion
Disney (December 5 - 1901 - December 15 - 1966)
20. A silent film made in 1900. It was directed by J. Stuart Blackton.
Pose-to-Pose
McCay (September 26 - 1869 - July 26 - 1934)
Squash and Stretch
The Enchanted Drawing
21. This is when the animation is created first - then audio is added later. Sound effects are used to complement the spatial and temporal settings established by the visuals.
Post-synchronous sound
Straight ahead action
Fleischer (July 19 - 1883 - September 11 - 1972)
Pose-to-Pose
22. Invented by French scientist Charles-Émile Reynaud - it was a more sophisticated version of the zoetrope. It used the same basic mechanism of a strip of images placed on the inside of a spinning cylinder - but instead of viewing it through slits - it
Newton's 3 Laws of Motion
Praxinoscope
Flip book
Arcs
23. An English photographer who spent much of his life in the United States. He is known for his pioneering work on animal locomotion which used multiple cameras to capture motion - and his zoopraxiscope - a device for projecting motion pictures that pre
Muybridge (9 April 1830 - 8 May 1904)
Universal Theme
Story Arcs
Timing
24. An animation technique in which key poses are created to establish timing and placement of characters and props in a given scene or shot.
Blackton (January 5 - 1875 - August 13 - 1941)
The Illusion of Life
Anticipation
Blocking
25. A French caricaturist who made "Fantasmagorie" which is considered to be the first fully animated film ever made. It was made up of 700 drawings - each of which was double-exposed - leading to a running time of almost two minutes.
Staging
Serif
Fantasmagorie
Cohl (January 4 - 1857 - January 20 - 1938)
26. Two different approaches to the actual drawing process. One draws out a scene frame by frame from beginning to end. One involves starting with drawing a few key frames and then filling in the intervals later. One is best for creating a more fluid - d
Exaggeration
Post-synchronous sound
Straight ahead action and pose to pose
Newton's 3 Laws of Motion
27. Acknowledged by people everywhere as having some deep or central relevance to everyone. They might have to do with life in general - human nature - faith - courage - basic life transitions - love - loss - and any number of other things.
Universal Theme
Starevich (August 8 - 1882 - February 26 - 1965)
Theatre Optique
Keyframe
28. In a cartoon character this corresponds to what would be called charisma in an actor. A character who has this characteristic is not necessarily sympathetic — villains or monsters can also be appealing — the important thing is that the viewer feels t
Appeal
Multi-plane Camera
Flip book
Pre-synchronous sound
29. This principle means taking into account forms in three-dimensional space - giving them volume and weight. The animator needs to be a skilled draughtsman and has to understand the basics of three-dimensional shapes - anatomy - weight - balance - ligh
Solid Drawing
Persistence of Vision
Keyframe
Blocking
30. The speed of an action gives meaning to movement - both physical and emotional meaning. The animator must spend the appropriate amount of time on the anticipation of an action - on the action - and on the reaction to the action. If too much time is s
Stop motion
Serif
Timing
Appeal
31. The rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement.
Animation
Multi-plane Camera
Disney (December 5 - 1901 - December 15 - 1966)
Timing
32. Separate parts of a body will continue moving after the character has stopped.
Overlapping action
Follow Through
Leading
Flip book
33. The phenomenon of the eye by which an afterimage is thought to persist for approximately one twenty-fifth of a second on the retina.
Muybridge (9 April 1830 - 8 May 1904)
Universal Theme
Persistence of Vision
Blackton (January 5 - 1875 - August 13 - 1941)
34. A drawing that defines the starting and ending points of any transition.
Drag
Leading
Straight ahead action
Keyframe
35. One of the first filmmakers to use the techniques of stop-motion and drawn animation.
Phenakistoscope
Universal Theme
Starevich (August 8 - 1882 - February 26 - 1965)
Blackton (January 5 - 1875 - August 13 - 1941)
36. A moving picture show presented by Charles-Émile Reynaud in 1892. It was the first presentation of projected moving images to an audience.
Squash and Stretch
Staging
Post-synchronous sound
Theatre Optique
37. In typography - it refers to the distance between the baselines of successive lines of type.
Leading
Animation
Turn around
Starevich (August 8 - 1882 - February 26 - 1965)
38. Helps render movement more realistic and gives the impression that characters follow the laws of physics. Exaggerated used of the technique can produce a comical effect - while more realistic animation must time the actions exactly to produce a convi
Flip book
Anticipation
Story Arcs
Follow through and overlapping action
39. The tendency for parts of the body to move at different rates (an arm will move on different timing of the head and so on).
Story Arcs
Overlapping action
Staging
Flip book
40. The predecessor of the modern day projector. It consisted of a translucent oil painting and a simple lamp. When put together in a darkened room - the image would appear larger on a flat surface. Some slides for the lanterns contained parts that could
Anticipation
Arcs
Magic Lantern
Slow in and Slow out
41. It is called this because an animator literally works directly from the first drawing in the scene. This process usually produces drawings and action that have a fresh and slightly zany look - because the whole process is kept very creative. This tec
Sullivan (2 February 1887 - 15 February 1933)
Pre-synchronous sound
McCay (September 26 - 1869 - July 26 - 1934)
Straight ahead action
42. Adds more frames near the beginning and near the end of a movement - and fewer in the middle - to make the animation appear more realistic. This principle applies to both characters moving between two extreme poses and inanimate - moving objects.
Solid Drawing
Drag
Squash and Stretch
Slow in and slow out
43. A special motion picture camera used in the traditional animation process that moves a number of pieces of artwork past the camera at various speeds and at various distances from one another.
Thaumatrope
Muybridge (9 April 1830 - 8 May 1904)
Kinetoscope
Multi-plane Camera
44. The movement of the human body - and most other objects - needs time to accelerate and slow down. For this reason - animation looks more realistic if it has more drawings near the beginning and end of an action - emphasizing the extreme poses - and f
Flip book
Serif
Turn around
Slow in and Slow out
45. A 1937 American animated film produced by Walt Disney. Based on the German fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm - it is the first full-length cel-animated feature in motion picture history - the first animated feature film produced in America - the first
Flip book
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Story Arcs
Straight ahead action
46. A French illusionist and filmmaker famous for leading many technical and narrative developments in the earliest days of cinema. He was a prolific innovator in the use of special effects - accidentally discovered the substitution stop trick in 1896 -
Malias (8 December 1861 - 21 January 1938)
Cohl (January 4 - 1857 - January 20 - 1938)
Universal Theme
Zoetrope
47. Renderings of a character standing in multiple positions including facing front - 3/4 front - profile - 3/4 rear - and rear.
Newton's 3 Laws of Motion
The Illusion of Life
Turn around
Solid Drawing
48. This principle's purpose is to direct the audience's attention - and make it clear what is of greatest importance in a scene; what is happening - and what is about to happen. Johnston and Thomas defined it as "the presentation of any idea so that it
Malias (8 December 1861 - 21 January 1938)
Solid Drawing
Universal Theme
Staging
49. Most natural action tends to follow an arched trajectory - and animation should adhere to this principle by following implied "arcs" for greater realism. This can apply to a limb moving by rotating a joint - or a thrown object moving along a paraboli
Arcs
Story Arcs
Leading
Anticipation
50. In this type of animation - the animator plans his action - figuring out just what drawings will be needed to animate the scene. This is used for animation that requires good acting - where poses and timing are important.
Pose-to-Pose
Anticipation
Straight ahead action and pose to pose
Persistence of Vision