Chapter 4 Study Guide Flashcards

(18 cards)

1
Q

Retina

A

Light-sensitive layer in back of eye (start of vision by detecting light)

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2
Q

Photoreceptors: Rod vs cones

A

Rods: low light, black/white, shapes

Cones: more specific detail, work best in bright light, detect color/fine detail

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3
Q

Bipolar cells

A

connect photoreceptors (rods and cones) and take them to RGCs

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4
Q

Retinal Ganglion Cells (RCGs)

A

take info (even more condensed) to brain through the optic nerve

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5
Q

Fovea

A

Center of retina, Straight, sharpest vision (not peripheral)

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6
Q

Area V1 (Primary Visual Cortex)

A

Where brain starts understanding what it’s seeing (orientation, edges, basic features)

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7
Q

Orientation Selectivity

A

V1 neurons firing best to specific angles/edges

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8
Q

Retinotopic mapping

A

Neurons mirror the shape/layout of what you’re seeing

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9
Q

Cortical magnification

A

Brain gives more neurons to the fovea, edges have less

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10
Q

The binding problem and feature integration theory

A

Binding problem: challenge of explaining how the brain processes features and puts them together, see things as a coherent perception of object/experience

FIT: way to explain the binding problem: our brain has the preattentive stage (features processed separately) then focused attention stage (brain glues features together)

***illusory conjunction: brain incorrectly combining features from different objects (happens when attention is limited)

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11
Q

7 Gestalt principles of perceptual organization

A

Basic idea: brain organizes visual input into whole objects
FPSCCCS
1. Figure-Ground: we separate figure (object) from ground (background)

  1. Proximity: things close together are seen as part of the same group
  2. Similarity: things that look alike are grouped together
  3. Continuity: lines and patterns are seen as continuing smoothly rather than broken
  4. Closure: brain fills in missing info to complete an object (ex: dotted circle perceived as full circle)
  5. Common Fate: things that move together are seen as a group
  6. Symmetry: symmetrical objects are seen as belonging together, forming coherent shape
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12
Q

Dual Stream Hypothesis (vision)

A

Vision is processed along two separate pathways after the primary visual cortex (V1)

Ventral: “what” – identity, color, shape TEMPORAL
Dorsal: “where/how” – location, how to interact PARIETAL

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13
Q

How are the two streams of vision related to the conditions visual-form agnosia and optic ataxia?

A

Visual-form agnosia: cannot recognize objects but can reach and grasp them (ventral is affected)

Optic ataxia: can recognize objects but can’t reach for them (dorsal is affected)

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14
Q

Three properties of sound waves, how they relate to our perception of sound, and how they are reflected in visualization of sound wave

A
  1. Frequency: how fast wave vibrates, determines pitch, waves more packed together=high frequency
  2. Amplitude: height of the wave, determines loudness, higher wave=louder sound
  3. Complexity: shape of wave is simple or complex=pure or mixture of tones
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15
Q

how are high vs low pitched sounds different on basilar membrane

A

low are at far end/tip (membrane is more flexible here so better for slower waves), high are at base (near entrance)

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16
Q

place vs temporal coding

A

place: location on the basilar membrane

Temporal: timing of firing tells us the pitch (limitation: can’t do for high frequencies)

17
Q

tonotopic organization

A

neighboring neurons respond to neighboring frequencies

high frequencies are at the posterior, low frequencies are at anterior

18
Q

Dual stream hypothesis of audition and their functions

A

Dorsal: where sound is coming from, how to act on it
Ventral: what the sound is

Rhesus Macaque Auditory Cortex research showed that some neurons responded to “what” while some responded to “why” suggesting dual stream