Module 18 Flashcards

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1
Q

how does light travel

A
  • in waves
  • through air, empty space, and some liquids and solids
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2
Q

amplitude for light

A
  • intensity of energy
  • determines the brightness of light
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3
Q

wavelength in light

A
  • length in space of each cycle of the wave
  • determines the hue of light
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4
Q

frequency

A
  • how fast the wave cycles
  • measure in Hz (cycles per second)
  • inversely related to wavelength
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5
Q

two light waves

A
  • light is made of two waves at 90° angles from each other
  • one is magnetic and the other is electrical
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6
Q

the electromagnetic spectrum

A
  • visible light is only a small portion of waves that exist
  • light is a linear spectrum, but we perceive it as a circle
  • combine red and violet frequencies to make magenta
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7
Q

lense

A
  • focuses light
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8
Q

cornea

A
  • protective layer
  • helps focus light in towards the eye
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9
Q

pupil

A
  • lets light into the eye
  • appears black from outside
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10
Q

iris

A
  • muscle that makes the pupil dialate
  • adjusts for the amount of light coming in
  • colored part of the eye
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11
Q

optical nerve

A
  • transmits visual information to the brain
  • creates a blind spot in the eye because no photoreceptors
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12
Q

fovea

A
  • focal point in the retina
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13
Q

retina

A
  • layer of photoreceptors in the eye
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14
Q

the visual pathway

A
  • light that hits the right side of the eye goes to the right side of the brain (comes from left)
  • has to do with where in the eye the light hits, not which eye
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15
Q

animals that don’t have a blind spot

A
  • cephalopods (octopi)
  • photoreceptors are in front of the neurons they connect to so the retina doesn’t need a hole for the optic nerve
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16
Q

two types of photoreceptors in the retina

A

cones and rods

17
Q

rods

A
  • night vision
  • motion
  • more in periphery
  • more sensitive to light and motion
18
Q

cones

A
  • allow color perception
  • more in fovea
  • short, medium, and long wavelength receptive cones
19
Q

three cone types

A
  • for short, medium, and long wavelengths
  • ratios of firing rates between different cone types tell us the hues of light
  • no single cone type on its own gives us color information
20
Q

how color vision deficiency occurs

A
  • “colorblindness”
  • one cone type is absent
  • one cone type isn’t fully functional
  • has a tuning curve that is not sufficiently different from another cone type
  • most common involves lack of sensation of redness vs. greenness
21
Q

Helmholtz’s trichromatic theory of color perception

A
  • any color can be represented (at least approximately) as a combination of red, green, and blue light
  • light color is additive
22
Q

opponent process theory of color perception

A
  • red vs. green
  • yellow vs. blue
  • white vs. black
  • demonstrated by negative afterimages
    • desensitization to a color increases sensitivity to the opposite color
23
Q

opponent processing of motion

A

-waterfall illusion
- desensitization to unchanging direction of motion causes aftereffect of perceived motion in the opposite direction

24
Q

monocular depth perception

A
  • only one eye needed
  • cues include size and height
    • determines closeness to the horizon
  • linear perspective
    • parallel lines converge in the visual field as they get farther away
  • texture gradient
    • textures appear more densely packed, less spread out and detailed when they are farther away
  • atmospheric/Ariel perspective (haze)
    • more distant objects look fainter, blurrier, and bluer
  • relative motion
    • when youre moving, closer objects move across your visual field faster than distant objects
  • interposition/occlusion
25
Q

binocular depth cues

A
  • require two eyes at once
  • binocular/retinal disparity
    • the farther away an object is, the more similar its position on the two retinas
  • convergence
    • how much you have to cross your eyes to focus on the object
26
Q

feature detectors

A

neurons that respond to specific features, such as shape, angle, and movement

27
Q

parallel processing

A
  • different aspects of an object are processed in different brain areas and then integrated into a whole
28
Q

color and light constancy

A
  • the brain adjusts our perception of color to keep colors constant under different lighting conditions
  • simplifies perception in the real world