perception Flashcards

1
Q

what is a pure tone made up of

A

amplitude (maximum air pressure in each cycle)

frequency (the number of cycles of changing air pressure per second)

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2
Q

amplitude and loudness

A

there is positive correlation between increased amplitude and perceived loudness (this does not increase 1-1)

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3
Q

auditory transduction

A
  • basilar membrane in the cochlea responds to frequencies
  • the membrane is ordered so that the base responds to high frequencies and the apex responds to low frequencies
  • it is made up of hair cells which fire based on frequency
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4
Q

basilar membrane hair cells

A

mechanoreceptors which send electrical signals to the brain via the auditory nerve

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5
Q

place coding (auditory)

A

determining the amplitude of sound frequencies depending on which hair cells are activated

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6
Q

what is the human hearing range

A

20-20,000 Hz

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7
Q

complex sounds

A

sounds with a mix of different frequencies

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8
Q

the fundamental frequency

A

the lowest frequency of the complex sound

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9
Q

harmonic complex sounds

A

all frequencies are integer multiples of the least common denominator

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10
Q

auditory masking

A

using a sound with the intention of covering up human detection of another sound

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11
Q

visual vestibular integration dysfunction

A

visual cues indicate that you are rotating, but vestibular information contradicts this
the compromise feels like falling
e.g. camera obscura tunnel

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12
Q

pseudophone

A

creates discrepancies between where the brain locates a sound and where it visually is

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13
Q

what is flavour integration comprised of (4)

A

olfactory receptors in nose
light receptors in eyes (colour changes perception)
touch receptors in mouth (crunchiness)
sound receptors in ears (hearing texture influences perception)

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14
Q

visual acuity

A

ability to see fine detail

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15
Q

what is the process of an image passing through to the primary visual cortex?

A

LIGHT -> RETINA [photosensitive ganglion cells] -> OPTIC NERVE AXONS -> OPTIC CHIASM [cross over] -> LATERAL GENICULATE NUCLEUS -> PRIMARY VISUAL CORTEX

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16
Q

why does v1 receive a distorted image

A

the fovea is over represented in terms of photoreceptors, so central vision is much more detailed

17
Q

what is the retina made up of

2

A

120 mil photoreceptors that respond to light

fovea - responsible for visual acuity (focuses on objects of interest)

18
Q

what do rods/cones detect

A
cones = colour, make up the fovea
rods = low light, make up majority of photoreceptors
19
Q

how does the visual system interpret upside down images

A

it has a topographic map system, so that size and dimensions are preserved

20
Q

two streams of the primary visual cortex

A

dorsal - to superior parietal lobe; ‘where’ system

ventral - to inferior temporal lobe; ‘what’ system

21
Q

specialised areas to process visual stimuli (3)

A

FFA Fusiform Face area - faces
PPA Parahippocampal Place area - places
EBA Extrastriate Body Area - bodies

22
Q

two visual systems in a frog

A

lesions to visual area created blind area

would ignore prey in blind spot, but would still manage to jump around obstacles in blind spot

23
Q

evidence for distinct dorsal stream

A

ppts with optic ataxia = dorsal damage

- no difficulty identifying stimuli, but difficulty moving towards targets / pointing without delay

24
Q

evidence for distinct ventral stream

A

ppts with visual agnosia = ventral damage
- highly proficient at grasping objects, but incapable of facial recognition or copying pictures in drawing (but not from memory)

25
Q

size estimation & ebbinghaus illustration

A

2 circles of the same size
perceive the circle surrounded by smaller circles as bigger, because we use surrounding stimuli and information to help estimate

26
Q

change blindness

A

shows that there are gaps in our perceptual systems and we may discard details that do not make logical sense

27
Q

space based theory of attention

A

‘spotlight’ metaphor
we move our attention across a space, we then focus on whatever falls within that visual field
‘zoom lens’ metaphor
the attention area can grow or shrink depending on what is being processed

28
Q

3 types of visual searches (space based theory of attention)

A

feature search - target is defined by a single feature (EX colour)
conjunction search - target is defined by the conjunction of two+ features
spatial configuration search - the target and the distractors contain the same basic features

29
Q

the binding problem - visual attention

A

the challenge of combining different visual features, as colour motion and orientation are represented by separate neurons

30
Q

object based theory of attention

A

feature integration;
a set of basic features can be processes preattentively, but the correct binding of features to objects requires attention

31
Q

evidence that visual features are represented separately and need to be bound together

A

illusory conjunction - the incorrect combining of the features of two objects into one object (EX seeing a green square and red circle, but processing it as a green circle)

32
Q

saliency - bottom-up attention

A

processing noticeable edges, colour, brightness
used in experimental settings, but in real life salient information may not be salient and vice versa // ppl tend to have fixations on nature which isnt always salient

33
Q

top-down attention

A

fixating on useful information, or contextual cues which may be complex

34
Q

yarbus & the unexpected visitor (top-down attention)

A

ppts asked to examine a painting, with different objectives

the gaze behaviour changed dramatically depending on what the goal was