Chapter 4 Unit 1

Cards (96)

  • Psychophysics
    The study of how physical stimuli translate into our psychological experience.
  • Perception
    The selection, organization, and interpretation of sensory input.
  • Sensation
    The stimulation of sense organs.
  • Stimulus
    Any detectable input from the environment.
  • Absolute Threshold
    The minimum intensity a stimulus can be and still be detected by a human (50% of the time).
  • Just Noticeable Difference
    The smallest difference in intensity between two senses that a sense can detect (50% of the time).
  • Signal-Detection Theory
    The detection of stimuli depends on both sensory and decision processes.
  • Subliminal Perception
    The registration of sensory input without conscious awareness.
  • Sensory Adaptation
    A gradual decline in sensitivity to prolonged stimulation.
  • Light
    A form of electromagnetic radiation that travels as a wave moving at the speed of light.
  • Amplitude
    The height of a wave. Affects brightness of a light and loudness of sound.
  • Wavelength
    The distance between peaks in a wave. Affects color of a light and pitch of a sound.
  • Retina
    Neural tissue in the eye that receives light, processes images, and sends visual information to the brain.
  • Cornea
    Transparent "window" that light enters the eye through.
  • Lens
    A transparent eye structure that focuses the light rays falling on the retina.
  • Nearsightedness
    When close objects are seen clearly but distant objects are not. The light focused by the lens is focused in front of the retina.
  • Farsightedness
    When distant objects are seen clearly but close objects are not. The light focused by the lens is focused behind the retina.
  • Iris
    The colored ring of muscle that regulates the amount of light that enters the light.
  • Pupil
    The opening in the center of the iris that allows light to enter into the rear chamber of the eye.
  • Optic Disk
    A hole in the retina where the optic nerve fibers exit the eye.
  • Cones
    Visual receptors in the retina that play a role in daytime and color vision.
  • Rods
    Visual receptors in the retina that play a role in nighttime and peripheral vision.
  • Ganglion Cell
    Neuron that is stimulated in the retina by information received by the cones and rods of the retina.
  • Fovea
    Tiny spot in the center of the retina that contains only cones.
  • Dark Adaptation
    When the eyes become more sensitive to light in low illumination.
  • Light Adaptation
    When the eyes become less sensitive to light in high illumination.
  • Receptive Field
    Area of the retina that, when stimulated, affects the firing of a specific cell
  • Optic Chiasm
    The point at which the optic nerves from the inside half of each eye cross over each other and then project to the opposite halves of the brain.
  • Feature Detectors
    Neurons that respond selectively to very specific features of more complex stimuli.
  • Subtractive Color Mixing
    Removing some wavelengths of light, leaving less light than was originally there.
  • Additive Color Mixing
    Putting more light into a mixture than exists in any one lone light.
  • Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
    The eye contains specialized receptors to receive differing wavelengths of red, blue, and green light.
  • Color Blindness
    Deficiencies in the ability to distinguish among colors.
  • Complementary Colors
    Two colors that when mixed produce gray tones.
  • Afterimage
    A visual image that persists after the visual stimulus has been removed.
  • Opponent Process Theory of Color Vision
    Color perception depends on receptors that make opposite responses to three pairs of colors.
  • Reversible Figure
    A drawing that is compatible with two interpretations that can shift back and forth.
  • Perceptual Set
    A readiness to perceive a stimulus in a certain way.
  • Inattentional Blindness
    Failure to see visible objects because your focus is elsewhere.
  • Feature Analysis
    Process of detecting specific elements in visual input and assembling them into a more complex form.