This part of the eye can expand and contract to let light in.
What is the pupil?
The loudness or softness of a sound is measured by the height of the wave or this.
What is amplitude?
This theory explains how we feel pain based on the brain's response.
What is the gate-control theory?
This is the process where the lens of the eye changes shape to focus on images near or far.
What is accomodation?
This structure is a coiled fluid filled part of the air where sounds are turned into neural impulses by triggering hair cells.
What is the cochlea?
All of our senses except smell are processed through this part of the brain.
What is the thalamus?
This area of the eye contains the cones and is the central focal point of the retina.
What is the fovea?
Theory of temporal coding that states the rate of neural impulses travelling on the auditory nerve match the rate of the tone.
What is frequency theory?
Before going to the smell cortex in the temporal lobe, messages are sent to this structure to smell.
What is olfactory bulb?
The Young-Helmholtz Theory states cones see these three colors.
What are red, green, and blue?
The lowness or highness of a sound based on frequency is known as this.
What is pitch?
These two areas of the ear are responsible for our vestibular sense.
What is the semicircular canals and vestibular sacs?
People who can not recognize faces suffer from this.
What is face blindness or prosopagnosia?
Damage to cochlea receptors or auditory nerve is known as this type of deafness.
What is sensorineural deafness?
A person that has blended senses and could see music has this.
What is syesthia?