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Index
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Intro To Psychology
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Chapter 1
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Sensations and Perception
level: Sensations and Perception
Questions and Answers List
level questions: Sensations and Perception
Question
Answer
special receptors in the sense organs are activated, allowing various forms of outside stimuli to become neural signals in brain
sensation
process of converting outside stimuli, such as a light, into neural activity
transduction
specialized forms of neurons that make up the nervous system
sensory receptors
eliminate the polarization of (The transmission of a nerve impulse along a neuron from one end to the other occurs as a result of electrical changes across the membrane of the neuron) stimulated
depolarization
The transmission of a nerve impulse along a neuron from one end to the other occurs as a result of electrical changes across the membrane of the neuron (unstimulated)
polorization of neural impulse
a sensation that normally occurs in one sense modality occurs when another modality is stimulated
synesthesia
the smallest different between 2 stimuli that is detectable 50% of the time
Just noticeable difference (JND)
(psychophysics) the concept that a just-noticeable difference in a stimulus is proportional to the magnitude of the original stimulus
Weber's Law
the lowest level of stimulation that a person can detect
absolute threshold
stimuli below conscious awareness
subliminal stimulus
processing stimuli without conscious awareness
subliminal perception
provides a method for assessing the accurary judgments or decisions under uncertain conditions, used in perception research. "hits, misses, false alarms, correct rejection"
signal detection theory
a general accommodation to unchanging environmental conditions
habituation
tendency of sensory receptor cells to become less responsive to a stimulus that is unchanging
sensory adaptations
eyes constantly moving to prevent from adapting to what they see
microsaccades
tiny light packets of waves that have specific wavelengths
photons
determined by amplitude of waves (high or low). The higher the wave the brighter.
perception of brightness
determined by length of the wave. Short = blue end of visible spectrum, long = red end
perception of color
the purity of color. less saturated colors may have a mixture of wavelengths
perception of saturation
special kinds of neurons in mouth responsible for gustation (sense of taste).
taste receptor cells
anterior insula and frontal operculum (gustatory cortex)
taste sent to
bumps on tongue with taste buds lining their walls
papillae
processed in somatosensory cortex of parietal lobe
texture of food
chemical senses
Taste and smell
the faculty that enables us to distinguish scents
olfaction
transduces (turns into signals for brain) odors
nasal passages
tiny hair-like cells that project into the nasal cavity (receptors for smell)
cilia
cilia, stimulated by molecules of substances. replaced every 5-8 weeks
olfactory receptor cells
two bulb-like projections of the brain located just above the sinus cavity and just below frontal lobes, receive info from olfactory receptor cells
olfactory bulbs
higher cortical areas: primary olfactory cortex, orbiofrontal cortex, amygdala
smell sent to
the body senses consisting of the skin senses, the kinesthetic and proprioceotive senses and vestibular sense
somesthetic senses
skin receptors just beneath skin, respond to changes in pressure
pacinian corpuscles
skin receptors just beneath uppermost layer of skin, responds to changes in temp, pressure, and pain
free nerve endings
receptors that detect pain or pressure in organs
visceral pain
pain sensations in skin, muscles, tendons, and joints. Sharp and fast (warning) or general ache (reminder)
somatic pain
the ability to feel movements of the limbs and body
kinesthesia
failure of the sweat glands
anhidrosis
inability to feel pain
CIPA and congenital analgesia
the ability to sense the position and location and orientation and movement of the body and its parts
proprioception
a sensory system located in structures of the inner ear that registers the orientation of the head
vestibular sense
vestibular organ, tiny sacs found just above cochlea containing gelatin-like fluid with tiny crystals
otolith organ
vestibular organ. 3 circular tubes filled with fluid that stimulates hair like receptors when rotated. one in each plane of motion
semicircular canals
theory explaining motion sickness where info from eyes conflicts with info from vestibular senses
sensory conflict theory