Sensation And Perception Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between absolute threshold and difference threshold?

A

Absolute threshold is the amount necessary to be perceived, difference is the amount of difference between multiple stimuli needed before they are perceived as being different.

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2
Q

What is jnd?

A

Just noticeable difference: amount of change needed to predict e difference between two stimuli.

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3
Q

What do Fechner’s law and Steven’s power law intend to measure?

A

The relationship between the intensity and the sensation of a stimulus.

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4
Q

What is signal detection theory?

A

A theory that allows researches to test the response biases and stimulus a sensitivity of participants with a valid paradigm of hits, misses, false alarms, correct negatives via ROC curves. John Swets refined these.

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5
Q

What are the four steps in sensory information processing?

A

Reception, transduction (from physical to neural energy), projection areas, and neural pathways.

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6
Q

What is the duplicity theory of vision?

A

Retina contains two kinds of photoreceptors.

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7
Q

What is the difference between rods and cones?

A

Rods are for dim light and more plentiful, cones are for colours, details, and bright lights (only receptors in fovea).

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8
Q

What is the organization of cells in the eye?

A

Rods and cones connect to bipolar cells which connect with ganglion cells. Gang lions group together to form the optic nerve. (Horizontal and amacrine cells as well.)

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9
Q

Who is Max Wertheimer and what is the phi phenomenon?

A

Founder of Gestalt Psychology, two lights flashing in succession often perceived as one.

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10
Q

What happens at and after the optic chiasm?

A

The nasal fibers cross paths and transmit information to the lateral geniculate nucleus (thalamus), the visual cortex (occipital lobe), and the superior colliculus.

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11
Q

What did Hubel and Wiesel study that earned them a Nobel Prize?

A

Feature detection theory, specialization do of simple (orientation and boundaries), complex (movement), and hyper complex (object shape, abstract) cells.

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12
Q

What is the difference between brightness and illumination?

A

Illumination is the objective measurement of light on a surface whereas brightness is just the subjective impression of illumination.

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13
Q

What are rhodopsins and what do they have to do with dark adaptation?

A

Rhodopsins are the only photo pigments for rods made of a vitamin A derivative. When it absorbs light, it decomposes, so the light entering rods before you enter the theatre decompose a large amount of your rods through a process called bleaching. Adaptation is waiting for the rods to regenerate.

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14
Q

Want is simultaneous brightness contrast?

A

Idea that areas look brighter if surrounded by darkness, caused in part by lateral inhibition.

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15
Q

Describe the difference between additive and subtractive colour mixture.

A

Subtractive - mixing pigments, like paint

Additive - lights, red blue and green, either we perceive actual light or get reflected off an object

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16
Q

What is the Young-Hemholtz theory of colour vision?

A

Trichromatic theory: three types of cones differentials receptive to colours, the combination of stimulation to different degrees would determine the colour perceived

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17
Q

What is Hering’s opponent process theory of colour vision?

A

Three opposing pairs: red green, blue yellow, black white.

18
Q

What are texture gradients?

A

Variations on perceived surface texture due to distance, things farther away seem smaller and denser.

19
Q

What is motion parallax and the kinetic depth effect?

A

Morton parallax - direction and speed of objects in relation to a fixation point when you are moving changes
Kinetic - when the object moves but the perceived doesn’t.

20
Q

Name one of the only binocular depth cues.

A

Binocular disparity/stereopsis - disparity between both eyes combined creates a form of depth.

21
Q

What are the five laws explaining form perception?

A

Proximity, similarity, good continuation, closure, prägnanz.

22
Q

What is the law of prägnanz?

A

Perceptual organization will always be simple, regular, and symmetric.

23
Q

What is the theory of isomorphism? Who posited it?

A

There is equivalent correspondence between what one perceives and its pattern of stimulation in the brain, posited by Kohler.

24
Q

What is the difference between bottom-up and top-down processing?

A

Bottom up: direct summation of sensory output (data driven)

Top down: guided by cognition, memories and expectations

25
Q

In what five ways can one make light appear to be moving?

A

Real motion: (move the light)
Apparent motion (stroboscopic/phi phenomenon): two dots flashing on opposite sides are perceived as one
Induced motion: everything around the light moves
Auto kinetic effect: light seems erratic without frame of reference
Motion aftereffect: after movement a spot of light will appear to move in the opposite direction.

26
Q

What is the difference between proximal and distal stimuli?

A

Distal is the actual object, proximal is the sensory info we receive from the object.

27
Q

What are the four constants in visual perception?

A

Size: depends on apparent distance, the brain will further compensate its scaling the farther away an object is.
Shape: a shape doesn’t change even if it’s manipulated (door)
Lightness: lightness in colour remains the same despite illumination
Colour: colour doesn’t change when we change which wavelength we see (sunglasses)

28
Q

At what age will infants not cross the glass in a visual cliff paradigm?

A

6 months.

29
Q

What is the relationship between frequency and wavelengths?

A

Inverse; the higher the frequency the shorter the waves.

30
Q

What is intensity?

A

Amplitude of a wavelength, merasured in decibels.

31
Q

Name important subjective dimensions of sound.

A

Loudness (intensity), pitch (frequency), timbre (instrument, complexity).

32
Q

Describe the processes in play when hearing.

A

Outer ear: pinna and eardrum/tymphanic membrane
Middle ear: ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes) transmit to inner ear
Inner ear: entrance (oval window), basilar membrane runs along cochlea, organ of corti rest on the basilar membrane (hair cells), from cochlea to auditory nerve

33
Q

What is place resonance theory? Who posited it?

A

Each pitch causes different vibrations in the basilar membrane and different hair cells to bend. Proposed by Helmholtz and Young.

34
Q

What is frequency theory?

A

Rate of vibration of basilar membrane = frequency. Vibration = # of neural impulses per second. Pitch = number of impulses travelling up the nerve.

35
Q

What is the Békésy travelling wave?

A

Finding that lower frequencies maximally vibrate near the tip of the cochlea, and lower ones vibrate near the oval window.

36
Q

Name the regions involved in tasting.

A

Papillae on the tongue have taste buds, sensory info is transmitted to taste centre in thalamus.

37
Q

Name the regions involved in smelling.

A

Smell receptors in olfactory epithelium and travels to olfactory bulb.

38
Q

What is the gate theory of pain?

A

Theory that thee is a gating mechanism in the spinal cord that turns pain signals on and off.

39
Q

What two aspects are included in proprioception?

A

Vestibular and kinaesthetic senses.

40
Q

What piece of evidence goes against the all or nothing hypothesis of selective attention?

A

The cocktail party phenomenon!

41
Q

What is the Yerkes-Dodson law?

A

Law that states too little or too much arousal is bad for performance.

42
Q

What is the volley theory of pitch perception?

A

That high neural firing rates can be maintained in the frequency theory as long as nerve fibres work together.