chapter 1 Flashcards

1
Q

perceptual process

A

steps leading from a stimulus to a response

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2
Q

7 steps of the perceptual process

A
  1. stimulus in the environment
  2. stimulus hits receptors
  3. receptor processes
  4. neural processing
  5. perception
  6. recognition (goes both ways with perception)
  7. action (goes both ways with recognition)
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3
Q

distal stimulus

A

stimulus in the environment - ex a tree

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4
Q

proximal stimulus

A

is the result of the distal stimulus hitting receptors - is an internal representation of the distal stimulus
ex our perception of a tree isn’t based on getting it in our eye, its based on the light reflected from the tree entering the eye and reaching visual receptos

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5
Q

principle of transformation

A

stimuli and responses created by stimuli are transformed, or changed, between the distal stimulus and perception

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6
Q

principle of representation

A

everything we perceive is based on representations of stimuli formed on receptors and activity of our nervous system, not direct contact with stimuli

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7
Q

steps 1 and 2

A

distal stimuli becomes proximal through transformation and representation

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8
Q

step 3 receptor processes

A

sensory receptors transform environmental energy into electrical energy (transduction) and shape perception by the way they respond to different properties of the stimuli

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9
Q

step 4 neural processing

A

neurons transmit signals from receptors to and within the brain and change (or process) these signals as they are transmitted

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10
Q

frontal lobe and perception

A

receives signals from all senses - plays a role in perceptions that involve coordination of information received through two or more sense

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11
Q

step 5 perception

A

conscious awareness

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12
Q

step 6 recognition

A

placing an object in a category that gives it meaning

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13
Q

step 7 action

A

motor activities in response to the stimulus

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14
Q

three major components of the perceptual process (simplified)

A

stimulus, physiology, behaviour

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15
Q

stimulus behaviour relationship

A

relates stimuli to behavioural responses like perception, recognition, and action

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16
Q

psychophysics

A

method used to study stimulus behaviour relationship - measures relationships between stimulus and behaviour - ex oblique effect

17
Q

oblique effect

A

people have an easier time detecting gratings oriented vertically or horizontally as opposed to obliquely

18
Q

stimulus physiology relationship

A

relationship between stimuli and physiological responses, like neurons firing

19
Q

physiology behaviour relationship

A

physiological responses and behavioural responses

20
Q

absolute threshold

A

smallest stimulus level that can just be detected

21
Q

method of limits

A

measures a persons threshold - stimuli are presented in either ascending or descending order, person makes a judgement on whether or not they can identify them

22
Q

crossover point

A

change from detection to no detection (yes to no) - threshold comes from the average of all the crossover points taken from all the replications of the procedure

23
Q

method of constant stimuli

A

stimuli presented one at a time but in random order of intensity - most accurate

24
Q

method of adjustment

A

participant, rather than experimenter, adjusts the stimulus intensity - fastest

25
Q

difference threshold

A

smallest difference between two stimuli that enables us to tell the difference between them

26
Q

what are three ways to measure perceptual abilities

A

magnitude estimation, recognition testing and reaction time

27
Q

hard problem

A

how do the physical dimensions of the world turn into psychological experiences?

28
Q

what is perception?

A

the psychological dimension of experience - things like pitch, brightness, loudness, as opposed to sound waves, light, food particles

29
Q

knowledge

A

any information the perceiver brings to a situation - prior experience and expectations

30
Q

materialism/physicalism

A

there is no mind - everything is physical

31
Q

stimulus behaviour/perception relationship example oblique effect

A

measuring grating acuity - stimulus is oriented gratings and behavioural response is detecting it the grating’s orientation (and in turn detecting the lines)

32
Q

grating acuity

A

the smallest width of lines participants can detect

33
Q

stimulus physiology relationship- oblique effect

A

measuring grating acuity by looking at physiological responses of the brain (using metabolism and blood flow to record neuronal activity) in response to different orientations

34
Q

physiological behaviour/perception relationship - oblique effect

A

measuring grating acuity through measuring perception/detection and physiological responses - measured in same participants = more direct assessment of physiology behaviour relationship

35
Q

classical psychophysical methods

A

methods for measuring stimulus behaviour relationships using psychophysics

fechner - measures thresholds
- method of limits
- method of constant stimuli
- method of adjustment

36
Q

magnitude estimation and the power function

A

measures how stimulus intensity affects our estimations of its magnitude

37
Q

method for magnitude estimation

A

a standard stimulus gets assigned a value - participants are presented with varying intensities of the stimulus and rate it in proportion to the standard

38
Q

recognition test

A
39
Q

why is it important to make the distinction between the physical and the perceptual

A

because there isn’t a one-to-one relationship - our perceptual response to stimuli doesn’t line up exactly with physical intensity - there are also lots of physical things that exist that we can’t perceive