PSY100 - Ch 5 Sensation and perception

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agnosia

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agnosia

neurological disorder characterized by an inability to recognize and identify objects or persons using one or more of the senses

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sensation

The process of detecting environmental stimuli or stimuli arising from the body

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perception

The process of interpreting sensory information

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psychophysics

The study of relationships between the physical qualities of stimuli and the subjective responses they produce

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signal detection theory

The analysis of sensory and decision-making processes in the detection of faint, uncertain stimuli

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absolute threshold

The smallest amount of stimulus that can be detected

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difference threshold

The smallest detectable difference between two stimuli

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sensory adaptation

The tendency to pay less attention to a nonchanging source of stimulation

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audition

The sense of hearing

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binocular cue

A depth cue that requires the use of both eyes

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bottom-up processing

Perception based on building simple input into more complex perceptions

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top-down processing

A perceptual process in which memory and other cognitive processes are required for interpreting incoming sensory information

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cochlea

The structure in the inner ear that contains auditory receptors

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cones

A photoreceptor in the retina that processes colour and fine detail

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cornea

The clear surface at the front of the eye that begins the process of directing light to the retina

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depth perception

The ability to use the two-dimensional image projected on the retina to perceive three dimensions

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difference threshold

The smallest detectable difference between two stimuli

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fovea

An area of the retina that is specialized for highly detailed vision

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somatosensory homunculus

a map along the cerebral cortex of where each part of the body is processed

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mechanoreceptors

a type of somatosensory receptors which relay extracellular stimulus to intracellular signal transduction through mechanically gated ion channels

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nocireceptors

pain receptors activated by damaged stimuli

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gate control theory

The theory that suggests that input from touch fibres competes with input from pain receptors, possibly preventing pain messages from reaching the brain

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gustation

The sense of taste

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gestalt principles

similarity, continuation, closure, proximity, figure/ground, and symmetry & order

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iris

The brightly coloured circular muscle surrounding the pupil of the eye

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lens

The clear structure behind the pupil that bends light toward the retina

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monocular cue

A depth cue that requires the use of only one eye

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motion parallax

objects that are farther away seem to move more slowly than objects that are closer

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olfaction

The sense of smell

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olfactory bulb

One of two structures below the frontal lobes of the brain that receive input from the olfactory receptors in the nose

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olfactory nerve

A nerve carrying olfactory information from the olfactory receptors to the olfactory bulbs

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opponent process theory

A theory of colour vision that suggests we have a red-green colour channel and a blue-yellow colour channel in which activation of one colour in each pair inhibits the other colour

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optic nerve

The nerve exiting the retina of the eye

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pupil

An opening formed by the iris

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retina

Layers of visual processing cells in the back of the eye

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retinal disparity

The difference between the images projected onto each eye

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rod

A photoreceptor specialized to detect dim light

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taste bud

A structure found in papillae that contains taste receptor cells

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transduction

The translation of incoming sensory information into neural signals

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trichromatic theory

A theory of colour vision based on the existence of different types of cones for the detection of short, medium, and long wavelengths

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vestibular system

The system in the inner ear that provides information about body position and movement

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synesthesia

A condition where the stimulation of one sensory pathway leads to the simultaneous and automatic stimulation of another sensory pathway

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temporal pathway (ventral stream)

The “what” visual pathway that extends from the occipital lobe into the temporal lobe

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parietal pathway (dorsal stream)

The “where” visual pathway that extends from the occipital lobe into the parietal lobe

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split brain

patients in whom the corpus callosum has been cut for the alleviation of medically intractable epilepsy

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contralateral organization

the arrangement whereby the motor cortex of each cerebral hemisphere is mainly responsible for control of movements of the contralateral (opposite) side of the body

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figure ground relationship

whatever isn’t the focus of visual field is automatically assigned as background

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illusory contours

tendency to perceive contours even when they don’t exist

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interpreter

left hemisphere process that attempts to make sense out of events

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fusiform face area

area of the brain that becomes particularly active when people look at faces

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