Blinded By the Lights
I Can See Clearly Now
Do You Hear What I Hear?
My CHEMICAL Romance
Can't Touch This! & Other S&P
100

The receptors located toward the center of the retina that are responsible for day and color vision

What are cones?

100

(name the Gestalt principle)

What is figure-ground?

100

The perceived pitch of a tone is largely determined by its (number of repetitions of a periodic waveform in a given unit of time)

What is frequency?

100

Someone who tends to be extremely sensitive to sweet and bitter tastes and spicy foods

What is a supertaster?

100

Where tactile receptors are located

What is skin?

200

The outer protective "window" of the eye through which light enters

What is the cornea?

200

The perceptual process that allows us to accurately read a series of words with jumbled up letters

What is top-down processing?

200

The three tiniest bones in your body, collectively known as the ossicles, that transmit sound vibrations from the tympanic membrane (eardrum) to the cochlea are called

What are the hammer, anvil, and stirrup? (or malleus, incus, stapes)

200

The proper name for our sense of taste

What is gustatory system/gustation?

200

The lobe and cortex responsible for processing tactile sensory input

What is the parietal lobe; somatosensory cortex?

300

After the opening number, Rachel's eyes are no longer bothered by the bright stage lights (what has occurred?)

What is sensory adaptation?

300

The binocular depth cue that contrasts differing views of the same object from each eye

What is retinal disparity?

300

The brightness/intensity of a light is analogous to this feature of a sound

What is loudness?

300

This sense is not routed through this brain structure before being processed in the cerebral cortex

What is olfaction?

300

The body sense that gathers sensory input from your semicircular canals that send signals to the cerebellum to maintain balance

What is the vestibular sense?

400

This is complete color blindness and the rarest form of color blindness where people only see in shades of gray, black, and white

What is monochromatism?

400

The tendency to experience a stable perception despite constantly changing sensory input (ex: your friend gets smaller as they walk away but you don't perceive them shrinking)

What is perceptual constancy?

400

The ear structure labeled D

What is the cochlea?

400

1) What is the name of the taste associated with fats: creaminess or richness of food?
2) Which is the taste associated with savory/meaty flavors?
3) What is not a taste, but is related to endorphins because the active food compound, capsaicin, triggers pain receptors in the mouth, which can lead to a release of endorphins—natural painkillers produced by the body.

What is oleogustus?
What is umami?
What is spiciness?

400

The theory that explains why biting your tongue while getting an injection blocks your experience of pain from the needle

What is gate-control theory?

500

Which theory of vision takes place in the cones (all color perception involves 3 different color receptors)? Which theory takes place in the ganglion cells (Afterimages result when certain ganglion cells in the retina are activated)?

Trichromatic = cones; opponent-process = ganglion cells

500

The term that explains why placing the below figure between "A" and "C" would lead you to perceive the figure as "B" instead of "13"

What is context effects? (contextual perception)

500

The theory that says pitch perception depends on the rate that the entire basilar membrane vibrates

What is frequency theory?

500

The process of converting sensory input into signals that can be processed in the brain

What is transduction?

500

You see a white dress in bright sunlight, but in a shadow, it appears gray. This is why you still perceive the dress as white

What is color constancy?

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