Chapter 3-5 Flashcards

0
Q

Transduction

A

Tendency of the brain to stop attending to constant, unchanging information.

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1
Q

Sensation

A

The process that occurs when special receptors in the sense organs are activated, allowing various forms of outside stimuli to become neural

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2
Q

Habituation

A

The process of converting outside stimuli, such as light, into neural signals in the brain.

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3
Q

Visual accomidation

A

The change in the thickness of lens as the eye focuses on the objects that are far away or close.

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4
Q

Rods

A

Visual sensory receptors found at the back of the retina, responsible for non-color sensitivity to low levels of light.

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5
Q

Cones

A

Visual sensory receptors found at the back of the retina responsible for color vision and sharpness of vision

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6
Q

Cochlea

A

Snail shaped structure of the inner ear that is filled with fluid.

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7
Q

Organ of corti

A

Contains receptor cells for the sense of hearing.

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8
Q

Auditory nerve

A

Bundle of axons from the hair cells in the inner ear.

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9
Q

Olfactory bulbs

A

Areas of the brain located just above the sinus cavity and just below the frontal lobes that receive information from the olfactory receptor cells.

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10
Q

Somesthetic senses

A

The body senses consisting of the skin senses, the kinesthetics sense, and vestibular senses.

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11
Q

Skin Senses

A

The sensation of touch, pressure, temperature, and pain.

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12
Q

Kinesthetic senses

A

Sense of location of body parts in relation to the ground and each other.

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13
Q

Vestibular senses

A

The sensations of movement, balance, and body position.

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14
Q

Perception

A

The method by which the sensations experienced at any given moment are interpreted and organized in some meaningful fashion.

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15
Q

Depth perception

A

The ability to perceive the world in three dimensions.

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16
Q

Extinction

A

The disappearance or weakening of a learned response following the removal or absence of the unconditioned stimulus or the removal of a reinforcer.

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17
Q

Spontaneous recovery

A

The reappearance of a learned response after extinction has occurred.

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18
Q

Vicarious conditioning

A

Classical conditioning of a reflex response or emotion by watching the reaction of another person.

19
Q

Operant conditioning

A

The learning of voluntary behavior through the effects of pleasant and unpleasant consequences to responses.

20
Q

Reinforcement

A

Any event or stimulus that, when following a response, increases the probability that the response will occur again.

21
Q

Positive reinforcement

A

The reinforcement of a response by the addition or experience of a pleasurable stimulus.

22
Q

Negative reinforcement

A

The reinforcement of a response by the removal, escape from, or avoidance of an unpleasant stimulus.

23
Q

Punishment

A

Any event or object that when following a response, makes that response less likely to happen again.

24
Q

Shaping

A

The reinforcement of simple steps in behavior that lead to a desired, more complex behavior.

25
Q

Successive approximations

A

Small steps in behavior, one after the other, that lead to a particular goal behavior.

26
Q

Learned helplessness

A

The tendency to fail to act to escape from a situation because of a history of repeated failures in the past.

27
Q

Observational learning

A

Learning new behavior by watching a model perform that behavior.

28
Q

Encoding

A

The set of mental operations that people perform on sensory information to convert that information into a form that is usable in the brain’s storage systems.

29
Q

Sensory memory

A

The very first stage of memory; the point at which information enters the nervous system through the sensory systems.

30
Q

Iconic memory

A

Visual sensory memory, lasting only a fraction of a second.

31
Q

Eidetic imagery

A

The ability to access a visual memory for 30 seconds or more.

32
Q

Echoic memory

A

The brief memory of something a person has just heard.

33
Q

Selective attention

A

The ability to focus on only one stimulus from among all sensory output.

34
Q

Working memory

A

An active system that processes the information in short-term memory.

35
Q

Maintenance rehearsal

A

Practice of saying information to be remembered over and over one’s head in order to maintain it in short-term memory.

36
Q

Long-term memory

A

The system of memory in which all the information is placed to be kept more or less permanently.

37
Q

Elaborative rehearsal

A

A method of transferring information from STM into LTM by making that information meaningful in some way.

38
Q

Declarative memory

A

Type of long-term memory containing information that is conscious and unknown.

39
Q

Semantic memory

A

Type of declarative memory containing general knowledge, such as knowledge of language and information learned in formal education.

40
Q

Episodic memory

A

Type of declarative memory containing personal information not readily available for others, such as daily activities and events.

41
Q

Explicit memory

A

Memory that is consciously known, such as declarative memory.

42
Q

Recall

A

Type of memory retrieval in which the information to be retrieved must be “pulled” from memory with very few external cues.

43
Q

Recognition

A

The ability to match a piece of information or stimulus to a stored image or fact.

44
Q

Hindsight bias

A

The tendency to falsely believe , through revision of older memories to include newer information, that one could have correctly predicted the outcome of an event.

45
Q

Consolidation

A

The changes that take place in the structure and functioning of neurons when memory is formed.