sensation/perception/attention Flashcards

1
Q

what is a stimulus (in sensation)

A

event registered by our senses and gives about a response (physiological or psychological)

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2
Q

What are the properties of a stimuli?

A
  • occurs via sensory organs

- may be distant or proximal (outside or inside our bodies)

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3
Q

What are the 5 sensory modalities?

A
  • vision
  • audition
  • gustation
  • olfaction
  • somatosensation (touch, pressure, proprioception, balance)
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4
Q

What is transduction?

A

process by which the sense organs convert energy from environmental events into neural activity

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5
Q

What types off sensory coding are there?

A
  • anatomical coding

- temporal coding

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6
Q

What are the features of anatomical coding?

A
  • each sensory modality has its own sets of nerves

- distinction between stimuli of the same modality

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7
Q

What are the features of temporal coding?

A

rate of firing of axons (reflects how strong the stimuli is)

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8
Q

What is psychophysics?

A

systematic study of the relation between the physical characteristics of stimuli and the sensation they produce

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9
Q

What is psychophysics used to measure?

A
  • absolute threshold: minimum level of a stimulus that can be detected
  • different thresholds: minimal detectable difference between two stimuli
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10
Q

What is signal detection theory?

A

discriminating between a ‘signal’ and ‘noise’ (background stimuli and random neural activity)

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11
Q

What is perception?

A

our interpretation of what is represented by sensory input

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12
Q

What are the Gestalt principles?

A

laws by which visual system help to perceive the forms of objects and all visual input that we are receiving

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13
Q

Name the Gestalt principles

A
  • the adjacency/proximity principle
  • similarity principle
  • good continuation
  • the law of closure
  • principle of common fate
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14
Q

What are the theory is perception of form? (how does the brain recognise stimuli so fast?)

A

models of pattern recognition:

  • templates
  • prototypes
  • feature detection models
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15
Q

What are top-down influences on perception?

A

influences of higher brain functions in interpretation of stimuli that we see

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16
Q

What are features of top-down perception?

A
  • size and shape consistency + depth perception
  • the context in which we encounter something
  • perceptual set (selectivity and bias i.e. previous experiences, expectations etc)
17
Q

What is (selective) attention?

A

allocation of awareness to stimuli

18
Q

What is shifting attention?

A

reallocation of attention

19
Q

What does shifting attention compromise of?

A
  • disengagement
  • shifting
  • focus
20
Q

What is bottom up attention?

A

reflexively/automatically (i.e. in response to a stimulus appearing suddenly)

21
Q

What is top down attention?

A

consciously directed (i.e. looking out of the corner of your eye as someone tell you where to look)