Sensation and Perception

Description

Flashcards on Sensation and Perception, created by aruss16 on 09/10/2013.
aruss16
Flashcards by aruss16, updated more than 1 year ago
aruss16
Created by aruss16 about 11 years ago
84
1

Resource summary

Question Answer
Psychophysics the study of environmental energies and how it affects your psychology (behavior, mood, conciousness)
Sensation -physical absorption of energy (external the brain) 1. Reception 2. Transduction 3.Transmisson
Reception absorption of environmental energy by senses (ears, eyes, mouth)
Transduction conversion of energy so it can be processes, converts to a neurological impulse (action potential) --> information
Transmission sends to RF to filter before entering the brain
Perception cognitive, how we analyze 1. Selection 2. COding 3. Interpretation
Selection the RF selects and sorts to decide whats important (hind brain)
Coding thalamus receives whats important, organizes it, encodes in and sends to correct lobe, hippocampous creates memory encoder to chose where it will be stored
Interpretation analyze information, comprehend, have we seen it before? what should we do?
Bottom-Up Processing analysis that begins w/ the sensory receptors and works up to the brains integration of sensory information (slower but always correct)
Top-Down Processing information processing guided by higher level mental processes as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectation (we must have a cognitive assumption; experience to draw conclusion from)
Sensory Reduction sensational, receptors reduce the amount of energy received, prevents thalamic overload
Sensory Adaption diminishing sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus, Rf (HB) and Hippocampous/ Thalamus (MB), get used to perceiving something constant, process the RF uses to filter unimportant things out- when important uses selection to send to thalamus
Habituation filtering at the cortex, al senses can be habituated smell can only be habituated, getting used to a sense
Absolute Threshold the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time
Difference Threshold the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the time, smallest amount of change that you can detect
Signal Detection predicts when and how we detect the presence of a faint stimulus(signal amid background stimulation (noise), ability to focus with distraction--> you look for it so you can react quicker
Weber's Law to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum proportion---> perceptual
Pain Sensation bodys warning system/ reduce amount of damage
Substance P chemical responsible for sensation of pain
Endorphins natural pain killers that the body produces, (opiates)
Gate Control Theory of Pain small nerve fibers- conduct pain signals in spinal cord, large nerve fibers- conduct sensory skills: when tissue is injured the gate opens and you feel pain- large fibers close the gate and block pain signals so they don't reach the brain
Wavelength the distance from one wave peak to the next
Frequency the number of wavelengths that pass through a stationary object at a given time (380 nm/s -75nm/s)
Low frequency wavelength slow moving, reddish colors
Infra-Red Waves undetectable, below 380 nm/s
High frequency wavelengths fast moving, bluish colors
Ultra-Violet waves undetectable, above 750 nm/s
Amplitude (Intensity) the amount of energy in a light or sound wave which we perceive as brightness or loudness as determined by amplitude --> how much energy it contains
Saturation (Complexity) absorbing multiple waves of different amplitudes, lengths and frequencies at the same time
Eye Lid external shield from dirt / blocks light / cleans the eye
Cornea internal shield, refracts light, high concentration of nerve endings per square mm than any other part of body
Pupil the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
iris a ring on muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye and the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening ( responds to amplitude of the wave)
Vitreous Humor inside ocular chamber, substance, translucent, gelatinous fluid, fills the chamber and allows for eye to maintain spherical shape
Retina light sensitive inner surface of eye, contains layers of neurons which begin transducing visual info-- converting to neural impulse (contains rods and cones [nerve receptor cells])
Rods detect black, white & gray, necessary for peripheral and twilight vision (when cones don't respond), concentrated on outside, shows contrast
Cones concentrated near center, function well in light conditions, detects fine detail (acuity) and gives rise to color sensation
Fovea central focal point of the retina- cones cluster around it, size of pin head, bullseye
Optic Nerve the nerve that carries nerve impulses from the eye and to the brain, (transmission --> retina to RF)
Blind Spot where the optic nerve leaves the eye there are no receptor cells there- creates a blind spot --> when fovea is on this spot you become blind
Sclera the outer casing of the eye, lots of blood vessels for oxygen, four ocular muscles, flesh all connected
Opaque white of the eye
Visual Accommodation The process by which the lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina (the lens changes it's curviture)
How do eyes adjust when light is limited? pupils dilate to allow more light in, the cones become more sensitive and rods are used more, takes 20 minutes for eyes to fully adapt
Myopia (Nearsightedness) visual impairment at a distance, focal point of lens not on retina/fovea but in front of fovea instead
Hyperopia (Farsightedness) focal point of lens extends beyond the fovea, not a point but a broad band, visual impairment is a near distance
Astigmatism misshaped eye, can be severe or suttle
Presbyopia lens loses elasticity (natural as you get older) takes longer to adjust muscle, transitional blindness b/c takes time
Perceptual Processing (visual) 1. Selection 2. Coding 3. Interpretaion
Feature Detectors nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, (shape, angle or movement) parts of the cortex- fusiform/inferior gyrus ...allows us to thin slice!
Selective Attention ability to focus on one impulse over a variety of distractions, cortex decides what to interpret (top down assumptions) matter of perception
Individual Motivation Perception b/c pf your experiences, you make cognitive assumptions based on what you want to perceive
Illusions based upon glitch with top down processing
Form Perception b/c of your experiences, you make cognitive assumptions based upon what you want to perceive
Figure & Ground Perception Figure--> grabas the attention of your eyes (stands out) Ground--> background which makes the figure jump out even easier
Reversibile Figure Illusions one picture with two images all based upon what you perceive as figure and ground - could be reversed
Closure Illusions given incomplete information, natural ability to complete it
Closure Illusions given incomplete information, natural ability to complete it
Impossible Figure Illusions impossible to determine figure from the ground
Perceptual Adaption you see incomplete/ distorted image but still can make it out
Perceptual Set Illusions mis perception of our ability to adapt perceptually
Perceptual Interference takes place at corpus callossum, when left brain tries to work simultaneously with the right brain and there is interference (Stroop Test)
Frame of Reference Perception comparative, point of reference of how we perceive the world, it doesn't change but appears so
How many colors & shades can a human perceive? 7 million
Color Deficient Vision Lack of cones or sensitivity to cones in retina
Opponent Process Theory each bipolar cell sensitive to two opposite wavelengths, when one half are over exhausted, the other half over compensates
After Image Illusions the risidual (phantom) presence of an image that is perceived even after its gone
Monocular Cues interposition, linear perspective, motions approx. size, shape and form, done by either eye alone
Binocular Cues retinal disparity, distance between objects, uses both eyes
Depth Perception ability to see objects in 3-D although the images that strike the retina are 2-D, uses binocular cues and monocular cues
Retinal Disparity (different levels of depth) b/c two eyes, retinas compare them and compute the distance (2-D)
Convergence crossing your line of sight approx. 20 feet in front
Frequency Theory the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, enabling us to hear pitch
Conduction Deafness hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea (middle ear) - can often be restored
Nerve Deafness hearing loss caused by damage to the cochleas receptor cells or to the auditory nerves (inability to convert energy or transmit sound waves to RF)
Place Theory in hearing, the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated- both sensation and perception
Uniqueness of Olfaction unlike other senses filtered by the RF and then perceived, 100% of smell bypasses filtering system of RF and is perceived
How many smells can the human body detect? 10,000
Pheromones biollogically produced, airborne emitted chemical that causes a change in behavior, humans have subtle ones (odorless), for lesser species this is the way they communicate, glands are in cheeks
Papillae taste buds, gustary receptors, absorb and transduce taste
4 Taste Sensations Sweet, Salty, Sour and Bitter
Necrobiosis cells die then replace, papillae for adult takes adult 30 days and child 7 days...children are more sensitive and don/t have acquired taste
Olfaction nothing more powerful to memory than smell, transduction not in nose but in the olfactory bulb located in the parietal lobe
Tactical Sense sense of touch
Vestibular Sense the sense of body movement and position, sense of balance and orientation (knowing where you are), posture [cerebellum, semicircular canals, vestibular sacs in inner ear]
Motion Sickness disruption between vestibular sense and visual sense, result is disorientation
Kinesthesis the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts (basal ganglia, corpus callossum) -voluntary motor control
Subliminal Perception below the threshold of perception, but you can sense-aware and sensed but not processed or perceived
Priming type of subliminal perception in which a repetitive subliminal stimulus causes change in mood, perception and behavior (Dave Barg, "Blink")
tachistoscope Machine that produces subliminal images, shows picture for less than a second but slow enough that absolute threshold will be met (we can sense but too quick to perceive)
Extrasensory Perception (ESP) Pseudo Psychology the controversial claim that perception can occur with abstract sensation (pseudo- un scientific, cant experiment, no data)
Frequency determines pitch; low frequency- low pitch, high frequency- high pitch
Amplitude (Intensity) determines the loudness of the sound wave
Range how diverse of sounds there are
Timbre quality/ clarity of sound
Outer ear absorbs sound waves (channels them through pinna into auditory canal to the ear drum)
Middle Ear transmits eardrum vibrations through piston of 3 bones to the cochlea (Amplifies the sound waves)
Inner Ear smallest bones in body, amplifies sound waves and directs them to oval window
Inner Ear smallest bones in body, amplifies sound waves and directs them to oval window
Cochlea converts sound waves into a neural impulse-transduction (hairs sway)
Auditory Nerve transmits the neural impulses from cochlea to the RF (sends off to the lobe)
Eustachian Tube in inner ear- preserves health of the ear- a drainage tube for fluid, water and pressure to the throat
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Psychology
Jonva Hansen
PS1509 Workshop
Lucy Frenz
6. Depth Perception
Reeth G
7. Colour Perception
Reeth G
12. Illusions
Reeth G
1. Intro to S&P
Reeth G
8. Motion Perception
Reeth G
9. Sound, The Ear & Auditory Perception
Reeth G
2. Eye & Retina
Reeth G
3. Neural Processing
Reeth G
4. Visual Cortex
Reeth G