A situation where a person correctly identifies that no signal is present?
What is a Correct Rejection?
This lobe of the brain is especially important for vision.
What is the Occipital lobe?
This is the term for fixations moving from one object or location to another.
What are saccades?
This theory refers to the perception of color arising from competing signals between pairs of colors.
What is the color-opponent process/theory?
Cues based on the fact that we are receiving slightly different images from each eye.
What is Binocular?
A person trying to detect a signal in a noisy environment fails to hear an actual sound. According to the signal detection theory, what is this classified as?
What is a miss?
Half of the axons from each eye crossover at this point.
What is the optic chiasm?
A rare neuropsychological disorder in which the affected individual has no perception of motion.
What is Akinetopsia?
These photoreceptors are most active when looking at a blue sky.
What are S-Cones?
A motion depth cue that involves the relative motion of objects as an observer moves forward or backward in a scene.
What is optic flow?
You think your phone vibrated, but there was no notification. This would be classified as..
This area of the brain is critical for motion perception.
What is MT/V5?
This is the effect that happens after staring at a moving object and then looking at a stationary scene and perceiving motion in the opposite direction.
What is motion aftereffect?
These are the 3 color-opponent pairs coded by the visual system
red v green
black v white
blue v yellow
This is the monocular depth cue that allows us to perceive an object’s size based on knowledge of its usual size.
What is a Familiar size depth cue?
An airport screener correctly detects a dangerous item in a passenger’s luggage. This is an example of a..
What is a Hit
retina-optic nerve- optic chiasm - optic tract - LGN - optic radiations- primary visual cortex.?
The superior temporal sulcus (STS) is critical for this type of motion.
What is biological?
These photoreceptors are most active when looking at a red apple.
What are L-cones? (Long wavelength)
This is the depth cue where distant objects appear hazier and bluish due to the scattering of light in the atmosphere?"
What is Atmospheric perspective?