The Senses
The Eye
The Ear
Perception & Processing
Theories and Phenomena
100

the process by which sensory receptors receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment?

Sensation

100

the transparent layer forming the front of the eye

Cornea

100

The sense or act of hearing is called ________.

Audition

100

Processing that begins with sensory receptors and works up to higher-level processing is called ________.

Bottom-up processing

100

theory states that color vision depends on opposing retinal processes (red-green, blue-yellow, white-black)

Opponent-process theory

200

the process by which our brain organizes and interprets sensory information

Perception

200

part of the eye regulates the size of the pupil

Iris

200

The number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time determines a sound’s ________.

Frequency

200

Processing guided by higher-level mental processes is called ________.

Top-down processing

200

theory explains how spinal “gates” control the transmission of pain signals to the brain

Gate-control theory

300

the study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological experience of them?

Psychophysics

300

light-sensitive inner surface of the eye contains rods and cones

Retina

300

structure in the inner ear contains the receptors for hearing

Cochlea

300

The idea that senses influence each other (e.g., smell + taste) is known as ________.

Sensory interaction

300

The sense of body movement and position that enables balance is called ________.

Vestibular sense

400

theory explains how we detect faint stimuli amid background noise

Signal detection theory

400

area of the retina is the point of central focus

Fovea

400

Damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells causes this type of hearing loss

Sensorineural hearing loss

400

The tendency for sensory receptors to become less responsive to unchanging stimuli is ________.

Sensory adaptation

400

The system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts is ________.

Kinesthesis

500

The minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time is called the ________.

Absolute threshold

500

theory suggests the retina has three types of color receptors—red, green, and blue

Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory

500

theory explains how the brain determines pitch based on where the basilar membrane is stimulated

Place theory

500

The smallest difference between two stimuli that a person can detect 50% of the time is the ________.

Difference threshold

500

The concept that bodily sensations, gestures, and other states can influence cognition is known as ________.

Embodied cognition