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Q 1/43
Score 0
Process by which our sensory receptors receive stimulus energies from the environment
30
Sensation
Perception
Sound
Sight
Q 2/43
Score 0
Process by organizing and interpreting sensory information. Enabling us to recognize meaningful events/objects
30
Perception
Sensation
Bottum Up Processing
Top Down Processing
43 questions
Q.
Process by which our sensory receptors receive stimulus energies from the environment
1
30 sec
Q.
Process by organizing and interpreting sensory information. Enabling us to recognize meaningful events/objects
2
30 sec
Q.
Begins with sensory receptors that send up to the brain
3
30 sec
Q.
Conducted by higher level mental processes, construct drawings on experiences and expectations
4
30 sec
Q.
Hearing your name at the other side of the room.
5
30 sec
Q.
Failing to see visible objects when our attention is elsewhere
6
30 sec
Q.
Failure to see changes in the environment
7
30 sec
Q.
People ignore or tune you out because you have changed
8
30 sec
Q.
Choosing to ignore something because you don't like it
9
30 sec
Q.
Study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli, such as their intensity, and our psychological experience on them
10
30 sec
Q.
Minimum stimulation necessary to detect a particular stimuli 50% of the time
11
30 sec
Q.
When we detect the presence of a faint stimulus amid loud background noise w/out having to achieve threshold based on alertness experience
12
30 sec
Q.
Below one's absolute threshold for conscious awareness
13
30 sec
Q.
Predisposing one's perception, memory, or response
14
30 sec
Q.
Minimum difference between 2 stimuli required for detection 50% of the time
15
30 sec
Q.
To be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by constant percentage
16
30 sec
Q.
Diminished sensitivity as a result of constant stimulation
17
30 sec
Q.
Conversion of one form of energy into another, transforming of stimulus energies such a sights
18
30 sec
Q.
Distance from one peak of light or sound wave to the next
19
30 sec
Q.
Height of sound wave; amount of energy in a light or sound wave perceived as brightness or loudness
20
30 sec
Q.
Dimension of color the wavelength produces
21
30 sec
Q.
Short=Blue, Long=Red, Low Amplitude=Dull, Great Amplitude=Bright
22
30 sec
Q.
Adjustable opening in the eye which light enters
23
30 sec
Q.
Transparent part of eye that protects it all
24
30 sec
Q.
Ring of muscle tissue surrounding pupil (color portion), controls opening and closing
25
30 sec
Q.
Transparent structure behind pupil that changes shape to help focus
26
30 sec
Q.
Light-sensitive inner-surface of the eye, containing receptor rods and cones, first stage of visual processing
27
30 sec
Q.
See image
28
30 sec
Q.
Help you see at night, black/white/grey, peripheral vision
29
30 sec
Q.
Retinal receptor cells, work well in day-time, colors, details
30
30 sec
Q.
Nerve that carries neural impulses from eye to brain
31
30 sec
Q.
Point at which optic nerve leaves eye, no more receptor cells are located there
32
30 sec
Q.
Scene
Retinal Processing- receptor rods & cones
Feature Detection- cells respond to specific features
Parallel Processing- brain cell gets info. about color/depth
Recognition- brain interprets images based on info.
33
30 sec
Q.
Our brain is able to detect details consciously and unconsciously
34
30 sec
Q.
Theory that retina contains 3 color receptors (Red-Green-Blue) sensitive eyes
35
30 sec
Q.
You only see one of the three colors
36
30 sec
Q.
We can see two of these colors
37
30 sec
Q.
Colors cancel out
Red-Green
Blue-Yellow
Black-White
38
30 sec
Q.
Sense of act or hearing
39
30 sec
Q.
How often wavelength shows up
40
30 sec
Q.
Pressure, Warmth, Cold, Pain
41
30 sec
Q.
System for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts, how we sense body parts moving