Vision
Sensing the World
Changes & Differences
Hearing & Tasting
Perceptual Rules
100

This is the term for the two types of light receptors in the eye.

Rods and Cones 

100

This is the process by which a sensory stimulus is converted into a neural impulse.

Transduction

100

Robert's ability to smell a slight skunk odor minutes before his wife means he has a lower one of these.

Absolute Threshold 



100

This part of the inner ear contains the hair cells and is important for hearing.

 Basilar Membrane - Cochlea

100

This is the Gestalt principle where we are more likely to perceive smoothly flowing lines rather than choppy or jagged ones

Continuation

200

These cells transmit signals from the rods and cones to the ganglion cells.

Bipolar Cells 



200

This is the sense of smell, technical term. 

Olfactory system

200

After feeling the cold water of a pool, no longer feeling cold illustrates this phenomenon.

Sensory Adaptation 



200

This is the frequency range that humans can typically hear.

20-20,000 Hz 

200

This is the term for the process by which we recognize, interpret, and organize our sensations.




Perception

300

What is another name for the optic disc?

The blind spot

300

This theory predicts when and how we detect a faint stimulus amid background noise

Signal Detection Theory 

300

What is the difference threshold?

the smallest amount by which two sensory stimuli can differ in order for an individual to perceive them as different.



300

This is the part of the ear that has tiny bones that concentrate vibrations from the eardrum.

Middle Ear 



300

This type of processing, used to fill in the blanks of "Ps_ch_lo_y," relies on knowledge and context

Top-down processing

400

This is the part of the visual field that has no photoreceptors and cannot detect images, also known as the blind spot.

Optic Disc

400

This theory proposes that there are three sets of opponent retinal processes: red-green, blue-yellow, and white-black.  

Hering's Opponent-Process Theory

400

Our nerve cells firing less frequently after constant exposure to a stimulus can be explained by this concept.

Sensory Adaptation

400

This taste is described as meaty, savory deliciousness that deepens flavor.

Umami

400

The illusion where two arrows are perceived as different lengths is named this

Müller-Lyer illusion

500

The Young-Helmholtz theory attempts to explain this type of perception.

Color Perception

500

Explain how we use our vision to make sense of the world. NEED TECHNICAL TERMS

Varies

500

What is Weber's Law?

the amount of change needed to be noticed is proportional to the original intensity, meaning you need a bigger change to notice a difference in a more intense stimulus.

500

What is the feeling in terms of taste that we discussed in class?

Astringent 

500

What is Binocular

Using two eyes to make sense of the 3D world.