What was specific about his painting technique was that he would always try to involve the viewer of the painting by drawing eyes and the positioning of his characters in such a way that it always seems as if they're maintaining eye contact with the audience. This was done using various perspectives and is kind of like an illusion, similarly to how the Mona Lisa is painted.
There is so many I can name but I’m to lazy to type
Wait how do you answer this like what it equals or names?
I believe the correct answer is in contrast to Greek
temples, Roman temples usually had columns attached to the walls completely or
partly which makes a pseudo-peripteral structure.
Roman temples had a pseudo-peripteral structure rather than
peripteral structure that Greek temples had. The temple of pseudo-peripteral
structure has free standing columns in the front, but the columns along the
sides are engaged (attached partly or completely to the wall) in the peripheral
walls of the naos. For example, the Temple of Athena Nike and Temple of Venus
and Roma have this kind of structure.