Psych-Chapter 4 Sensation Flashcards

1
Q

Amplitude

A

The height of a wave crest, used (in the case of sound waves) as a measure of sound intensity

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2
Q

Auditory ossicles

A

The three bones of the middle ear that transmit the vibrations of the eardrum to the oval bone

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3
Q

Basilar membrane

A

A membrane running the length of the cochlea, sound waves cause deformation of this membrane, bending the hair cells in the cochlea and thus stimulating the auditory receptors

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4
Q

Cochlea

A

The coiled structure in the inner ear that contains the basilar membrane

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5
Q

Cones

A

Visual receptors that respond to greater light intensities and give rise to chromatic(color) sensations

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6
Q

Decision criteria

A

An organism’s rule for how much evidence it needs before responding

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7
Q

Difference threshold

A

The smallest amount that a given stimulus must be increased or decreased sot hat an individual can detect the difference

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8
Q

Distal stimulus

A

An object or event in the outside world

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9
Q

Eardrum

A

The taut membrane that transmits the vibrations caused by sound waves from the auditory canal to the ossicles in the middles ear

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10
Q

Feature detectors

A

Neurons in the retina or brain that respond to specific attributes of the stimulus, such as environment, orientation and so on

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11
Q

Fechner’s law

A

The observation that the strength of a sensation is proportional to the logarithm of physical stimulus intensity

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12
Q

Fovea

A

The area roughly at the retina’s center where cones are plentiful and visual acuity is the greatest

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13
Q

Frequency

A

The number of wave peaks per second. In sound, frequency governs the perceived pitch of the sound

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14
Q

Gate control theory

A

The proposal that pain sensations must pass through a neural “gate” in order to reach thee brain and can be blocked at that gate by neurons that inhibit signals from the nociceptors

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15
Q

Glomeruli

A

Sites in the brain’s olfactory bulb where signals from the smell receptors converge

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16
Q

Hair cells

A

The auditory receptors in the cochlea lodged between the basilar membrane and other membranes above

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17
Q

JND just noticeable difference

A

The smallest difference that an organism can reliably detect between two stimuli

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18
Q

Kinesthesis

A

The sensations generated by receptors in the muscles, tendons, joints that inform us of our skeletal movement

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19
Q

Lateral inhibition

A

The pattern of interaction among neurons in the visual system in which activity in one neuron inhibits adjacent neurons’ response

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20
Q

Nociceptors

A

Receptors in the skin that give rise to the sense pain, they respond to various forms of tissue damage and to temperature extremes

21
Q

Olfactory epithelium

A

A mucous membrane at the top of the nasal cavity, contains the olfactory receptors neurons that respond to airborne molecules called odorants

22
Q

Opponent-process theory

A

A theory of color vision that proposes three pairs of color antagonists; red-green, blue-yellow, and white-black. Excitation of neurons sensitive to one member of a pair automatically inhibits neurons sensitive to the other member

23
Q

Optic nerve

A

The bundle of fibers that proceeds from each retina to the brain

24
Q

Oval window

A

The membrane separating the middle ear from the inner ear

25
Q

Papillae

A

Structures on the tongue that contain the taste buds, which in turn contain taste receptors

26
Q

Pattern theory

A

The proposal that different sensory qualities are encoded by specific patterns of firing among the relevant neurons

27
Q

Payoff matrix

A

The pattern of benefits and cots associated with certain types of responses

28
Q

Perceptual sensitivity

A

An organism’s ability to detect a signal

29
Q

Pheremones

A

Biologically produced odorants that convert information to the other members of the species

30
Q

Photopigment

A

A chemical in the photo receptors that changes to form in response to light, producing an electrical change that signals to the nervous system that light is present

31
Q

Photoreceptors

A

A light-sensitive cell located on the retina that converts light energy into neural impulses

32
Q

Place theory

A

A proposal about pitch perception stating that regions of the basilar membrane respond to particular sound frequencies, and the nervous system interprets the excitation from different basilar regions as different pitches

33
Q

Proximal stimulus

A

The energies from the outside world that directly reach our sense organs

34
Q

Psychophysics

A

An approach to perception that relates the characteristics of physical stimuli to the sensory experience they produce

35
Q

Receptive field

A

For a particular cell in the visual system, the pattern of retinal stimulation that most effectively causes the cell to fire. For some cells, this pattern is defined solely in the terms of a retinal location, for others, the most effective input has a particular shape, color, or direction of motion

36
Q

Retinal image

A

The image of an object that is projected on the retina. It’s size increases with the size of that object and decreases with the objects’s distance from the eye

37
Q

Rods

A

Photoreceptors in the retina that respond to lower light intensities and give rise to achromatic (colorless) sensations

38
Q

Sensory adaptation

A

The process by which the sensitivity to a stimulus declines if the stimulus is presented for an extended period of time

39
Q

Sensory coding

A

The process through which the nervous system represents the qualities of the incoming stimulus-whether auditory or visual, for example, or whether a red light or a green one, a sour taste or a sweet taste

40
Q

Signal detection theory

A

The theory that perceiving or not perceiving a stimulus is actually a judgement about whether a momentary sensory experience is due to background noise alone or to the background noise plus a signal

41
Q

Skin senses

A

The group of senses, including pressure, warmth, cold, pain and through which we gain information about our immediate surroundings

42
Q

Sound waves

A

Successive pressure variations in the air that vary in amplitude and wavelength

43
Q

Specificity theory

A

The proposal that different sensory qualities are signaled by different quality specific neurons. the theory is correct in only a few cases (pain)

44
Q

Timbre

A

The quality of sound part from its pitch or loudness, timbre enables us to distinguish a clarinet from an oboe, or one person’s voice from another

45
Q

Transduction

A

The process through which a physical stimulus is converted into a signal within the nervous system

46
Q

Trichromatic color vision

A

The principle underlying human color vision. Color vision occurs through the operation of three sets of cones, each maximally sensitive to a different wavelength of light

47
Q

Vestibular senses

A

The sensations generated by receptors in the semicircular canals of the inner ear that inform us abou the head’s orientation and movements

48
Q

Weber’s law

A

The observation that the size of the difference threshold is proportional to the intensity of the standard stimulus

49
Q

Absolute threshold

A

The smallest quantity of a stimulus that an individual can detect