1.6

Cards (60)

  • What is prosopagnosia commonly known as?

    Face blindness
  • What are the basic concepts of sensation and perception?
    • Sensation: Processing sensory information through sensory receptors.
    • Perception: Organizing and interpreting sensory input.
  • What are sensory receptors?

    Sensory nerve endings that respond to stimuli
  • How does bottom-up processing work?

    It detects lines, angles, and colors to form images
  • What is top-down processing?

    Information processing guided by higher-level mental processes
  • What is transduction in the context of sensation?

    Conversion of one form of energy into another
  • What does psychophysics study?

    The relationships between physical energy and psychological experiences
  • What is the absolute threshold?

    The minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time
  • What is signal detection theory?

    A theory predicting how and when we detect faint stimuli
  • What is a subliminal stimulus?

    A stimulus below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness
  • What is the difference threshold?

    The minimum stimulus difference a person can detect half the time
  • What does Weber’s law state?

    Two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage to perceive a difference
  • What is sensory adaptation?

    Reduced sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus
  • How does sensory adaptation benefit us?

    It allows us to focus on informative changes in our environment
  • How does sensory adaptation influence emotion perception?

    It reduces responsiveness to static facial expressions
  • What is the role of the cornea in vision?

    It is the eye's clear, protective outer layer that helps bend light
  • What does the iris do?

    It controls the size of the pupil in response to light intensity
  • What is the function of the lens in the eye?

    To focus light rays into an image on the retina
  • What is accommodation in vision?

    The process by which the lens changes curvature and thickness to focus light
  • What is myopia?

    Nearsightedness, where distant objects are seen better than near objects
  • How does the optic nerve function?

    It carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
  • What is the role of rods in vision?

    They enable black-and-white vision and are sensitive in dim light
  • What is the function of cones in the retina?

    They are sensitive to detail and color
  • What is the Young–Helmholtz trichromatic theory?

    It states that the retina contains three types of color receptors sensitive to red, green, and blue
  • What is color-deficient vision?

    It is when individuals lack functioning red- or green-sensitive cones
  • What does the opponent-process theory explain?

    Color vision depends on three sets of opposing retinal processes
  • What are feature detectors?

    Nerve cells that respond to specific visual features
  • How do feature detectors contribute to visual processing?

    They pass specific information to other cortical areas for complex pattern recognition
  • What is parallel processing in the context of sensation?

    It is the ability to process multiple sensory inputs simultaneously
  • What is audition?

    Hearing
  • How does amplitude affect sound perception?

    It determines the perceived loudness of sound
  • What does frequency determine in sound?

    It determines pitch
  • What happens when sound waves strike the eardrum?

    It triggers nerve impulses
  • What is the cochlea's role in hearing?

    It triggers nerve impulses in response to sound waves
  • What is sensorineural hearing loss?

    Hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea's hair cell receptors or the auditory nerve
  • What is conduction hearing loss?

    Hearing loss from damage to the mechanical system conducting sound waves to the cochlea
  • How does the brain interpret loudness?

    By the number of activated hair cells in the cochlea
  • What does place theory explain?

    It explains how we hear different pitches based on activity at different places along the cochlea
  • What does frequency theory suggest?

    It suggests that the brain reads pitch by monitoring the frequency of neural impulses
  • How do our two ears contribute to sound localization?
    They allow us to enjoy stereophonic hearing