Perception Flashcards

1
Q

What is perception?

A

Process by which agents interpret and organize sensation to produce a meaningful experience of the world. This information becomes a representation of who or what we interpret.

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2
Q

What are our five sensory modalities?

A

Light (vision), air vibrations (hearing), physical pressure (haptics), chemicals (taste and smell), and body position (kinesthetics/proprioception)

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3
Q

What is proprioception?

A

Proprioception is the ability to know where our body parts are in space when our eyes are closed.

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4
Q

Extramission vs Intromission Theory

A

Extramission is the theory that our eyes acted like sonars to see objects. The light from our eyes and the light from the world apparently helped us to see. This theory was proven wrong when people were asked to identify objects in the dark.
Intromission theory is the theory that we see from light which is reflected off of objects into our eyes. Color comes from the remaining light which hasn’t been absorbed.

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5
Q

How do our eyes focus?

A

The are muscles on either side of our lens which crunch and stretch the lens which focuses. The lens becomes more brittle as we age (sight worsens), and the the final shape of it determines whether we are far/near sighted.

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6
Q

What are receptors?

A

Receptors are located at the back of your eye and are light sensitive. Cells, in our brain, respond when they get hit by photons. This interaction increases/decreases firing rate whether or not light touches them.

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7
Q

What is foveating?

A

Foveating is when the retina focuses on something. We may think that we can see our surroundings while looking at a screen, but in reality everything is blurry while the retina is focused on one thing.

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8
Q

What are rods and cones?

A

Rods are located outside the fovea and are very good at detecting motion. On the other hand, cones are sensitive to color and details. So they work hand in hand for our vision.

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9
Q

What is Depth Perception (SPOT FM)?

A

Depth Perception includes Size, Perspective (things get smaller on the fovea as objects are farther away), Occlusion (when an object is in front of the other), Texture (shading and saturation: the more closer the more textured), Focus (we know how to focus our eyes on something which can determine distance/depth), and Multiple Images.

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10
Q

What is perceptual infinity?

A

This is related to multiple images. The farther something is, the less it moves from one eye to another. The eyes focus the same so there is no binocular vision.

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11
Q

What is binocular vision?

A

Binocular vision is seeing one thing differently between your two eyes. The more closer something is, they more the object seems like it jumps from one eye to the other

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12
Q

What are the Dorsal and Ventral Streams?

A

The Dorsal (“where” pathway) determines where things are. While the Ventral (“what” pathway) determines what they are. Dorsal stream travels up, while Ventral does the opposite.

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13
Q

What is the Pandemonium Model of Perception theory?

A

This is an old theory where perception was described to be a bunch of little independent demons that each look for one aspect (which we are aware of apparently) in an item to determine what it is.

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14
Q

What is the Template Matching Perception theory?

A

Old theory where we perceived things by looking at an overlap of pixels over the image to determine what it is.

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15
Q

What is Neural Network Perception?

A

When people mention this, they can be talking about 2 things.

1) Actuals neural networks (neurons connected and sending info to each other.
2) Artificial neural networks (we are interested in) that are programs that are inspired by neurons. There are 3 steps to this: input, hidden, and output. Between these stages, neurons get fired to different options of what our brain may perceive the object to be. The stronger one neuron may think something is, the stronger the connection between that stage and the the proceeding stage. Based on how active the connections for one connection (final answer) is, the NNP chooses to interpret something that way.

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16
Q

What is the concept of activation in Neural Network Perception?

A

This is similar to the concept of trust. The more we trust someone, the more likely we are to listen to them. Our neurons behave in the same manner. An external force isn’t required here. This process occurs when learning as well. We grow stronger connections by learning whether we are right or wrong. Punishment when wrong, credit when right.

17
Q

What is the difference between NNP and Pandemonium Model of Perception?

A

One main difference is that, in the PMP our brain would know what each demon is responsible of, but in the NNP we are not aware of what’s happening between our neurons.

18
Q

What is the pinna?

A

Our pinna is the outer shape of our ear, and it’s shaped to direct soundwaves to the ear canal and maximize our ability to locate sound in space.

19
Q

What is the Tympanic Membrane?

A

The tympanic Membrane is flexible and when sound hits it, the membrane moves and vibrates along with the pressure waves in the air. The bones connected to the membrane translate sound into neural signals (neurons firing bw/ neurons).

20
Q

What is the vestibular nerve?

A

This is the system that determines orientation. Our body creates crystals, the go to the cochlea, and determine orientation. When a crystal gets stuck, the brain gets confused at our orientation (condition of vertigo), but they’ll come loose eventually.

21
Q

What is echolocation?

A

It’s sending sound out, and perceiving the data based on the reflection of sound back. Bats do this to locate trees and such.

22
Q

What is the Touch Theory (Haptics)?

A

When something touches you, it’d form a shape and then gets sent to your brain so you can identify it. This theory was proved incorrect when subjects were told to put their hands behind their back to identify an object.. but they were unable to.

23
Q

What is Gustation (taste) - [4 points]?

A

What we think we taste is mostly what we smell. Though we have a lot of taste buds, when we get sick food tastes bland since your nose may be stuffed. Smell is used for marking territory, infertility, and tracking places. (ants release some sort of liquid whenever the track a good food location. This creates a trail which is then followed by other ants in a straight line). Pain receptors react to spicy food.

24
Q

What is Kinesthia, Proprioception, and the Vestibular System responsible for?

A

They help us to perceive where your body parts are and how they are moving in space. Sometimes, when people get their limbs amputated, they still feel the weight of their limb and it occasionally feels painful for some reason.

25
Q

What is Interoception?

A

Perception of hunger, need for digestive elimination, heart rate, need to sneeze, breathe, or cough.