MCAT Biology Sensation and Perception Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the function of the vestibular complex?

A

The vestibular complex function to detect rotational acceleration

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2
Q

The Vestibular complex is made up of ___,___,__,__

A

Three semicircular canals,
The utricle
The saccule
The ampullae

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3
Q

Light is ___ as it passes through the cornea

A

Refracted

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4
Q

The pigmentation of cells here absorbes excess light within the eye

A

Choroid (contains darkly pigmented cells)

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5
Q

___ is the surface upon which light is focused

A

Retina

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6
Q

The role of this part of the eye is to fine-tune the anlge of incoming light, so that beams are perfectly focused upon the retina

A

lens

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7
Q

The curvature of the lens (its refractive power) is vaired by the __

A

ciliary muscle

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8
Q

The retina contains ___ and __ which are responsible for detecting light

A

Rods and cones

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9
Q

The rods and cones located in the retina synapse with nerve cells called__

A

bipolar cells

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10
Q

Bipolar cells synapse with ___ whose axons comprise the optic nerve

A

Ganglion cells

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11
Q

The point on the retina where many axons from ganglion cells converge to form the optic nerve is the __

A

optic disk

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12
Q

Why is the optic disk known as the blind spot?

A

It contains no photoreceptors

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13
Q

In the center of the ___ is the fovea centralis

A

Macula

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14
Q

The fovea centralis contains only___

A

cones

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15
Q

The fovea centralis (focal point) is responsible for __

A

Extreme visual acuity

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16
Q

The special pigment proteins of photoreceptors is termed ___

A

opsin

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17
Q

Night vision is accomplished by the ___

A

rods which are more sensitive to dim light and motion

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18
Q

Rods are more concentrated in the ___

A

periphery of the retina

19
Q

___ require abundant light and are responsible for color vision and high acuity vision

A

Cones

20
Q

Cones are more concentrated in the ___

A

fovea

21
Q

What three colors are specialized cones working with?

A

Blue absorption green absorption and red absorption

22
Q

Normal vision is termed___

A

emmetropia

23
Q

Too much curvature of the cornea or lens causes___

A

light to be bent too much and to be focused in front of the retina

24
Q

Too much refraction at the lens or an abnormally long eyeball results in a focal length that is too short

A

Myopia

25
Q

Myopia can be corrected by a ___ lens

A

Concave (diverging) lens

26
Q

What does a concave (diverging) lens do?

A

Cuases the light rays to diverge slightly before they reach the cornea

27
Q

___ farsightedness results from focusing of light behind the retina

A

Hyperopia

28
Q

Too little refraction at the lens or an abnormally short eyeball results in a focal length that is too long

A

Hyperopia (farsightedness)

29
Q

Hyperopia (farsightedness) can be corrected by a

A

Convex (converging lens)

30
Q

__lens causes light rays to converge before reaching the cornea

A

Convex( converging)

31
Q

__ is an inability to accomodate (focus)

A

Presbyopia

32
Q

___ results from loss of flexibility of the lens, which occurs with aging

A

Presbyopia

33
Q

___ is the term to describe how many aspects of a visual stimulus (such as form, motion, color, and depth) are processed simultaneously instead of in a step-by-step or serial fashion

A

Parallel processing

34
Q

____explains why a certain area of the brain is activated when looking at a face, a different area is activated when looking at the letters on this page, etc.

A

Feature detection theory

35
Q

As we age we lose our ability to detect higher-pitched sounds, why tho?

A

Loud sounds can mechanically harm the hair cells, causing them to die. When this occurs, hair cell cant send sound signals to the brain. Once they die they never regrow

36
Q

The ___ is the minimum noticeable difference between any two sensory stimuli, 50% of the time

A

JND just noticeable difference or Difference threshold

37
Q

___ dictates that two stimuli must differ by a constant proportion in order for their difference to be perceptible

A

Weber’s Law

38
Q

A hit, by definition of signal detection theory refers to when

A

The signal is present and was detected

39
Q

A miss by definition of signal detection theory refers to when__

A

The signal was present but not detected

40
Q

A false alarm by definition of signal detection theory refers to when___

A

The signal was not present but the person thought it was

41
Q

A correct rejection by definition of signal detection theory refers to when__

A

The signal was not present and the person did not think it was

42
Q

The four possible outcomes of signal detection theory are_

A
  • a hit
  • a miss
  • false alarm
  • correct rejection
43
Q

__attempts to predict how and when someone will detect the presence of a given sensory stimulus

A

Signal detection theory