Brain
Nervous System
Other brain structures
Visual Perception
Visual Perception
100

The lobe responsible for abstract thought, social skills and planning

Frontal Lobe 

100

Comprised of brain and spinal cord

Central nervous system

100

The set of structures involved in the control of goal-directed voluntary movement

Basil Ganglia

100

The process whereby our sensory organs or receptors receive information about the environment and transmit it to the brain

Sensation

100

The principles of visual perception, used to organise and interpret perceptual stimuli; including figure-ground organisation, closure, similarity and proximity

Gestalt principles

200

the lobe responsible for processing of sensory information

Parietal lobe 

200

The bundle of nerve fibres connecting the brain with the peripheral nervous system

Spinal cord

200

This system consists of amygdala, hypothalamus and midbrain; implicated in memory, emotion, behaviour and motivation

Limbic system

200

The process whereby the brain organises and interprets sensory information.

Perception

200

Depth cues that use on eye independently to gauge distance and space

Monocular depth clues 

300

the lobe responsible for hearing, language and visual recognition

Temporal lobe

300

The type of neuron that carries information from the body and from the outside world into the central nervous system.

Sensory neuron

300

Is responsible for the consolidation of explicit memories and acts to transfer these to other parts of the brain for storage as long term memory

Hippocampus

300

The photoreceptors providing peripheral vision in black and white; they work in dim light

Rods

300

A binocular cue fir the depth perception; the automatic turning of the eyes inwards as we watch an object approaching

Convergence 

400

the part of the brain located at the rear of each frontal lobe, responsible for movement of muscles on each side of the body.

Primary motor cortex

400

The division of the CNS that sends messages from the body to the brain, made up of the somatic and autonomic nervous systems

Peripheral nervous system

400

A structure in the forebrain that plays a major role in controlling emotion and motivated behaviours such as eating, drinking and sexual activity

Hypothalamus

400

The photoreceptors providing clear vision in our colour; they work in bright light

Cones

400

The binocular depth cue that arises as the brain compares and contrasts the two different images obtained because of the distance between the two eyes

Retinal disparity

500

The cortex located in each parietal lobe, processes sensations such as touch, pressure, temperature and pain

Primary somatosensory cortex

500

The division of the central nervous system that controls voluntary movements and passes sensory information from the environment to the brain.

Somatic nervous system

500

The part of the brain central to emotion, aggression, fear and implicit learning

Amygdala

500

The process where stimulus is given meaning the brain based on our past experiences, motives, values and context

Interpretation

500

a theory applied to the Müller-Lyer illusion that proposes that our familiarity with the right angles and straight lines of the built environment informs our interpretation of linear perspective in pictorial depth perception

Carpentered world hypothesis