Important Terms
Sensations
The Eye
The Ear
Perception
100

Your interpretation of the information that is taken in by your senses is called this.

What is perception?

100

Sense that is not processed in the thalamus

What is smell?

100

When lighting is very dim, this part of the eye adjusts to let in as much light as possible.

What is the iris?

100

In waves, this determines the pitch we experience.

What is frequency?

100

Name 3 gestalt principles of perception

similarity, connectedness, continuity, closure, proximity

200

Receiving raw information from the senses is known as this.

What is sensation?

200

This identifies the belief that the whole is greater than the sum of it's parts.

What is Gestalt psychology?

200

The hole in the center of the eye, where light enters.

What is the pupil?

200

Separates ear canal from middle ear - vibrates in response to sound waves

what is the eardrum?

200

The tendency to see floor tiles as one pattern, rather than as separate squares is caused by this principle.

What is continuity?

300

Explain the difference between top-down and bottom-up processing 

bottom up - processing sensory info as it comes in

top down - perception driven by cognition - brain applies what it knows 

300

Sound is measured in

what is a decibel? 

300

The photoreceptors that don't work well in dim light, but perceive details.

What are cones?

300

This is the fluid filled, snail shaped structure, where sound waves are amplified and sent onto the brain.

What is the cochlea?

300

The perceived further distance of something which is higher in your visual field.

What is relative height?

400

Detecting about one drop of perfume diffused throughout a small house is an example of:

What is absolute threshold?

400

You keep the lighting on your phone as dim as the settings allow. When others look at your phone, they can hardly see anything. What explains your ability to see the screen perfectly clearly?

What is sensory adaptation?

400

Most people with color-deficient vison are not actually "colorblind". They simply lack functioning _________ or _____________ sensitive cones, or sometimes both. (two colors)

What are red or green?

400

This part of the ear helps with balance

what is the semicircular canals?

400

The apparent meeting of two parallel lines in the distance - helps us judge distance

What is linear perspective?

500

AKA the just noticeable difference, this is the minimum difference a person can detect between any two stimuli half the time.

What is difference threshold?

500

The McGurk Effect occurs when the auditory component of one sound is paired with the visual component of another sound, leading to the perception of a third sound. This is an example of....

What is sensory interaction?

500

This part of the eye carries information to your brain, where the thalamus will receive and distribute the information.

What is the optic nerve?

500

These are the nicknames for the smallest bones in our body- the three bones located in the middle ear.

What are the anvil, the stirrup, and the hammer?

500

perception cue that uses the differences in the visual fields of each eye to judge depth

What is retinal disparity?

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