Emergence of Cognitive Psychology
Agnosia
Object/Pattern Recognition
Biology for Perception
Direct & Indirect Theories of Perception
100
What was the dominant psychological discipline prior to cognitive psychology? 
Behaviorism 


100

Define visual agnosia 

Impaired object recognition

  • Occurs despite:

  • intact vision

  • intact intelligence

  • intact memory

  • Indicates disruption in the ventral object-recognition system

100

Which stream (dorsal/ventral) is most implicated in object recognition and why? 

Ventral stream is thought of as our 'what'pathway, as it concerns itself with identification of objects, face, colors, forms, etc.

100

What is the process of transduction? 

 conversion of physical energy into electrical signals

100

Define Perception 

 sensation and interpretation, making sense of the environment through bottom up and top down processes 

200

Name 2 ways we can observe cognition experimentally? 

accuracy and reaction time 

200

What is Apperceptive agnosia?

lack of integration of visual features (lines, colors, shapes) into coherent objects, making it impossible to recognize, copy, or draw items despite having intact vision

200

What is the utility of pattern recognition?

Pattern recognition is the mental process that allows us to:

  • detect structure in sensory input

  • interpret what we perceive

  • identify objects, sounds, faces, and symbols

200

What is a receptor field 

The area of the body or environment that activates a specific neuron. 

200

Define Unconscious inference 

 states that we use prior knowledge automatically and involuntarily to make sense of sensory information (especially if it's ambiguous).

300

What are top-down processing and bottom-up processing?


  • Top-down: "knowledge-driven", using previous experience, perception, etc. 

  • Bottom-up: "data-driven", input from sensory stimuli. 

300

What is associative agnosia? 

Associative agnosia is a disorder where a person can perceive an object correctly but cannot identify or assign meaning to it.

300

Name the 3 Elements to Template Theories 

  • Copy Stores: Long-term memory(LTM) contains detailed representations of objects we have encountered before (mental photocopies) 

  • Normalization: rotating size, resizing, etc, as real-world objects very rarely ever appear the same way. 

  • Search and Matching Strategies: Once normalized, the system must decide which template matches.

300

What is a primary cortex 

  • The primary cortex is the first cortical area (area of cerebral cortex) that receives sense input. 

300

What were the findings of the Palmer 1975 study? 

  • ~60 university students, shown various line drawings of scenes (e.g. kitchen) followed by a target object (as seen on right hand of image), and asked to identify the object. 

  • Identification was highest (in terms of accuracy and speed) when the target was congruent with the context (83%) compared with lower rates of accuracy in incongruent context or no context. 

  • We rely on top-down processing (knowledge & context) to perceive sensory input

400

What is Signal Detection Theory?


SDT helps us understand how we decide whether we have perceived something, especially when information is uncertain or noisy.

 

400

Which form of agnosia would result in difficulty copying or matching objects? 

apperceptive 

400

What are 'critical features' according to feature theories?

Necessary and sufficient features used to identify an object

400

What is the function of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)?


The LGN organizes information from both eyes, relaying the visual information to where it needs to go.  

400

What is the Ecological Approach to perception? 

 perception is a direct and immediate process, all information needed is given from the environment and higher processing is not necessary.

500

Which psychologists compared the mind to a 'black box' that could not be seen and therefore should not be studied 

John B. Watson & B.F. Skinner 

 


500

Integrative agnosia is a subtype of which form of agnosia? Where in perceptual processing would it occur (early, intermediate, or later) 


Apperceptive 


500
What component of the feature integration theory was thought of as crucial for understanding how features are unified into coherent object representations? 

attention 

500

Explain the role of the dorsal pathway in perception 

The dorsal stream is also thought of as our 'vision for action 'pathway, which pulls information about spatial awareness and navigation, rather than identifying objects in a space.

500

What are the components of the Ecological Approach 

  • Affordances: the action possibilities that the environment offers to anindividual/animal. It is relational between the individual and the environment. 

  • Optic Array: structured light from environment when reflecting off surfaces 

  • Invariants: aka stable properties of the world: e.g. Texture gradients, horizonline, relative size 

  • Optical Flow: continuous change of light/surfaces/etc. moving across retina as wetake in environment 

  • Organism-Environment System: organism and environment are in a unified system,and aspects of environment are defined by their affordances