Exam #1 Vocab Flashcards

1
Q

Innenwelt

A

An organism’s internal world

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2
Q

Umwelt

A

The world as the organisms perceives it

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3
Q

Umgebung

A

Hypothesized external reality, philosophical

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4
Q

Clever Hans

A

Horse that claimed to have been able to perform arithmetic, used subtle cues from others

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5
Q

Uncontrolled variables/confounds

A

Other factors you try to hold constant

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6
Q

Cartesian Dualism

A

Descartes, mind/brain problem, animal vs human brain

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7
Q

Structuralism/physiology of mind

A

Wundt, Titchener

Structuralism: analyze adult mind in terms of simplest components and find way they fit together to form complex forms (all experiences make up conscious), “action, reaction, sensation”

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8
Q

Introspection

A

Titchener, examination of one’s own conscious thoughts and feelings

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9
Q

Gestalt

A

All objects and scenes can be observed in their simplest forms, whole is more important than parts, whole does not equal sum of parts

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10
Q

Behaviorism

A

Behaviors can be rigorously described without referring to internal states, like thought and emotion, external of environment

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11
Q

Cognitivism

A

Focuses on mental processes and how people perceive, think, remember..about one stimulus rather than other, helps explain behaviorism

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12
Q

Classical Conditioning

A

Pairing two stimuli changes response to one of those stimuli

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13
Q

Conditioned stimulus

A

Previously neutral stimulus that is eventually associated with unconditioned stimuli and triggers conditioned response

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14
Q

Unconditioned stimulus

A

Naturally triggers response (ex: smell of food)

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15
Q

Unconditioned response

A

Unlearned response that occurs naturally (ex: salivating at smell of food)

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16
Q

Conditioned response

A

Learned response to previously neutral stimulus (ex: feeling hungry when hear whistle)

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17
Q

Correlations

A

Two things happen together

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18
Q

Contingencies

A

One thing happens because of another, cause and effect

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19
Q

Operant conditioning

A

An organism’s own actions are used as the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli

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20
Q

Generalization (to conditioned stimuli)

A

After conditioning, an organism will respond to other similar stimuli (ex: dog will salivate to higher or lower pitch than normal)

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21
Q

Blocking

A

Kamin, if organism learns that a conditioned stimulus is a reliable predictor of an UCS, then organism will not become conditioned to another CS

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22
Q

Contrast Effect

A

Enhancement or diminishment of perception, cognition, or performance as a result of successive exposure to stimulus of lesser or greater value (ex: rats ran slower after switching from large to small amounts of food)

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23
Q

Belongingness

A

Animals must be able to cognitively pair the stimuli, different organisms attend to the same stimulus in different ways

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24
Q

Taste aversion

A

Organism associates taste of a certain food with symptoms caused by toxic, spoiled, or poisonous substance

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25
Q

Schedules of reinforcement

A

Rule stating which instances of a behavior will be reinforced, part of operant conditioning

26
Q

Extinction

A

Disappearance of a previously learned behavior when the behavior is not reinforced

27
Q

Learned Helplessness

A

Condition in which an organism suffers from a sense of powerlessness from a traumatic event

28
Q

Spike train

A

Signals generated by neurons used to communicate with one another, series of spikes in time

29
Q

Pacemaker neurons

A

Facilitate onset of excitatory states, rhythmic bursting activity, doesn’t need stimulus

30
Q

Level IV type neuron

A

More of an irregular firing than pacemaker neurons

31
Q

Bayes’ Theorem (prior, prediction, posterior)

A

Our prior observations influence our current expectations, ways to update or revise beliefs in light of new evidence

Posterior- add to priors

32
Q

Retina

A

Receives light that lens has focused, converts light into neural signals, sends signals to brain for visual recognition

33
Q

Fovea

A

Center of retina, high visual acuity

34
Q

Photoreceptors

A

Rods (low level light), cones (color)

35
Q

Receptive field

A

Region of sensory space in which a stimulus will modify the firing of that neuron

36
Q

Retinal ganglion cells

A

Receives visual info from photoreceptors (on-center of receptive field, off surround &; off-center, on surround)

37
Q

Edge enhancement

A

Image processing filter that enhances the edge contrast of an image or video in an attempt to improve sharpness

38
Q

Retinotopic mapping

A

In lower visual areas, neurons are organized in orderly fashion, form 2D representation of visual image formed on retina

39
Q

Primary visual cortex (V1)

A

Part of neocortex that receives input from retina, composed of simple cells

Ganglion –> Thalamus –> V1

40
Q

Simple cells (orientation cells)

A

Cells fire preferentially to stimuli at certain angles, fire best in reaction to moving stimuli

41
Q

V2

A

More complex shape sensitivities in V2, edgy

42
Q

V4

A

Perception of color, curves and blobs

43
Q

Inferior Temporal Lobe (IT)

A

Crucial for visual object recognition, final stage in visual system

44
Q

Agnosia

A

Inability to interpret sensations and be able to recognize things

45
Q

Prosopagnosia

A

Inability to recognize faces

46
Q

Capgras Delusion

A

Unable to connect emotional representation of their loved ones to the visual representation, believe loved ones have been replaced by doubles (ex: aliens)

47
Q

Viewpoint invariance

A

Enables us to recognize objects regardless of viewing angle

48
Q

View-dependent recognition

A

Recognition by multiple views, we remember individual views of things and transform them in out mind to match current input

49
Q

View-independent recognition

A

We recognize things by combinations of primitive features

50
Q

Geons

A

Simple 2D or 3D forms corresponding to simple parts of an object, visual input is matched against structural representation of objects in brain (ex: ice cream cone broken up into sphere above a cone)

51
Q

Classic/Artistotelian View

A

Categories are definitions, assigning properties

52
Q

Feature Theories

A

How do we know which properties to compare (ex: plum to lawnmower?), features are registered early, automatically, and in parallel, while objects are identified separately and at a later stage in processing.

53
Q

Graded Membership

A

Objects closer to prototype are “better” members of the category than those farther from prototype

54
Q

Associative Networks

A

Cognitive models that incorporate long-known principles of association to represent key features of human memory (ex: bacon and eggs are linked in memory)

55
Q

Basic Level

A

Learned first, all familiar objects have basic category name

56
Q

Superordinate Level

A

Don’t give enough information, too general

57
Q

Subordinate Level

A

Give too much information, too specific

58
Q

Prototype Theory

A

Graded categorization, some members of a category are more central than others (ex: chair is more frequently cited than stool when asked about furniture)

59
Q

Exemplar Theory

A

Different things are “typical” depending on context, compare new info to info already in memory

60
Q

Theory Theories

A

Individuals hold a basic theory of psychology to infer mental states of others

61
Q

Shape bias

A

Tendency to generalize information about an object by its shape