Enables us to see colors
What is cones
The smallest percent of change we can notice in a stimulus is...
What is Webers Law
Small portion of electromagnetic spectrum that is visible
What is Visible Light
3 cone pigments work together to create color perception
What is Trichromatic Theory
Aspects of a scene that yield information about depth when viewed with only one eye
What is Monocular Cues
Distance between any two consecutive crests or troughs of a wave
What is Wavelength
All 3 cones are used to create this color for us....
Texture gradient, linear perspective, interposition, relative height, relative size, relative motion (All of these are examples of...)
What is Monocular Cues
What is it called when your senses analyze something and then your brain confirms or denys the expectation?
What is Bottom-Up Processing
What is the rare condition where you only have one cone and little to no color perception?
What is Monochromacy
What is it called when your brain analyzes something and then your senses confirm or deny the expectation?
What is Top-down processing
Process where physical sensations like smells and sounds are coded into neural signals for our brain to interpret
What is Transduction
What is the part of the eye called that sits in the back and contains the rods and cones?
What is The Retina
Difference in the retinal images using both eyes to provide information about depth
What is Binocular Cues
Number of wavelengths that make up the light (Definition straight from text book)
Purity