Chapter 4 Vocab Flashcards
(44 cards)
sensation
Simple stimulation of a sense organ.
perception
The organization, identification, and interpretation of a sensation in order to form a mental representation.
psychophysics
Methods that measure the strength of a stimulus and the observer’s sensitivity to that stimulus.
absolute threshold
The minimal intensity needed to just barely detect a stimulus.
just noticeable difference (JND)
The minimal change in a stimulus that can just barely be detected.
Weber’s law
The just noticeable difference of a stimulus is a constant proportion despite variations in intensity.
signal detection theory
An observation that the response to a stimulus depends both on a person’s sensitivity to the stimulus in the presence of noise and on a person’s response criterion
sensory adaptation
Sensitivity to prolonged stimulation tends to decline over time as an organism adapts to current conditions.
retina
Light-sensitive tissue lining the back of the eyeball.
accommodation (eye)
The process by which the eye maintains a clear image on the retina.
cones
Photoreceptors that detect color, operate under normal daylight conditions, and allow us to focus on fine detail.
rods
Photoreceptors that become active under low-light conditions for night vision.
fovea
An area of the retina where vision is the clearest and there are no rods at all.
blind spot
A location in the visual field that produces no sensation on the retina because the corresponding area of the retina contains neither rods nor cones and therefore has no mechanism to sense light.
receptive field
The region of the sensory surface that, when stimulated, causes a change in the firing rate of that neuron.
area V1
The part of the occipital lobe that contains the primary visual cortex.
visual-form agnosia
The inability to recognize objects by sight.
binding problem
A phenomenon that concerns how features are linked together so that we see unified objects in our visual world rather than free-floating or miscombined features.
illusory conjunction
A perceptual mistake where features from multiple objects are incorrectly combined.
feature integration theory
The idea that focused attention is not required to detect the individual features that comprise a stimulus but is required to bind those individual features together.
perceptual constancy
A perceptual principle stating that even as aspects of sensory signals change, perception remains consistent.
monocular depth cues
Aspects of a scene that yield information about depth when viewed with only one eye
binocular disparity
The difference in the retinal images of the two eyes that provides information about depth.
change blindness
A phenomenon that occurs when people fail to detect changes to the visual details of a scene.