Role of the Brain
Memory
Visual Perception
Gestalt Principles
Data
100

Identify the lobes of the Brain

Frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, occipital lobe, and cerebellum

100

What are the two base types of memory?

Long term memory and short term memory

100

What are depth cues?

Visual cues that help perceive depth and distance in a two dimensional image or scene.

100

Identify 4 gestalt principles

Proximity, figure and ground, good figure, symmetry, closure, continuance, similarity
100

What is another word for the standard deviation?

Variability

200

Explain the key functions of the left hemisphere

The left hemisphere is primarily responsible for controlling the right side of the body. Its uses are language, comprehension, and speech.

200

Explain short term memory

It is a cognitive process that holds a small amount of information in a readily available state for a short duration. It can retain information for 15-30 seconds. It holds approx. 5-9 items and plays a crucial role in problem solving, reasoning and navigation.

200

What are 4 monocular cues?

Occlusion, height in plane, relative size, interposition, linear perspective, aerial perspective, light and shade, monocular movement parallax.

200

Explain figure and ground principle

people instinctively perceive objects as either being in the foreground or the background  

200

Define what an independent variable is

a variable that stands alone and isn't changed by the other variables you are trying to measure.

300

What is the occipital lobes function?

It is primarily used for vision.

300

Identify two types of long term memory

Declarative (explicit) memory and procedural (implicit) memory.

300

Explain top-down processing

It begins with cognitive processes and is influenced by prior knowledge and expectations. It determines what were seeing based on past experiences and context.

300

What principle is it when: An object is incomplete or not fully closed?

Closure

300

What is Pearson's?

A method that measures similarity or correlation between data

400

Describe the main functions of the frontal lobe

The frontal lobe is responsible for high-level cognitive functions including problem solving, decision making, and planning. It also manages emotional expression, personality, and movement control.

400

Explain episodic memory

It is a type of long term memory that involves the recollection of specific events, situations, and experiences. These memories are time stamped, meaning they are associated with particular contexts and time, such as remembering your first day of school, or family holiday. It enables us to replay these events in our head as if we are reliving them, which is essential in our personal history and identity.

400

Contrast binocular and monocular cues

Monocular depth cues are depth cues that can be perceived without both eyes. These cues are height in plane, relative size, occlusion, and linear perspective. Binocular depth cues are information about depth perception that uses both eyes. There are two types of binocular depth cues: convergence and retinal disparity.

400

What principle is it when: Objects grouped together tend to be seen as a single figure

Good figure

400

What is a dependant variable?

It is something that depends on other factors.

500

Identify the function of the cerebellum

Primarily responsible for coordination, movement, cognitive skills, maintaining posture and balance, and motor learning.

500

What is the process of memory?

Encoding= Convert sensory input into a usable code that can be stores in memory, storage= holds encoded information for a period of time, and retrieval= Locates stored information and returns it to conscious awareness when needed.

500

List the 6 stages of visual perception

-Reception

-Transduction

-Transmission

-Selection

-Organisation

-Interpretation

500

What principle is it when: The eye is compelled to move from one object to another

Continuance

500

Calculate the mean for this data set:

4,5,8,10

The mean is 6.75