Sensation & Perception
Eyes & Ears
Taste & Smell
Perceptual Constancies
Depth Perception
Touch/Balance
100

_______ occur when the sensory organs--the eyes, ears, nose, skin, and taste buds--are activated, allowing various forms of outside stimuli to become neural signals in the brain.

Sensations

100

The sensitive surface of the eye that acts like the film in a camera is called

What is the retina

100

Which flavor is associated with being poisonous?

Bitter

100

This ability allows you to recognize that a distant person is not shrinking, even though their image on your retina becomes smaller as they move farther away.

What is Size Constancy?

100

These terms describe depth cues that use one or both of our eyes

monocular cues

binocular cues

100

Certain parts of the body like your fingertips and lips are very sensitive because they have more of these

What are nerve endings

150

This theory states that perception of sensory stimulus is influenced by factors such as setting and expectations.

Signal Detection theory

150

Fluid-filled structure of the inner ear where sound waves are changed to neural impulses.

Cochlea

150

The sense of taste can be most easily disrupted by blocking which other sense?

Smell

150

You notice a shirt looks the same, whether seen under fluorescent light in a classroom or soft lighting at home, thanks to this perceptual process.

What is color constancy

150

A laboratory device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals

What is a visual cliff

150

What are three parts of touch or the skin senses?

Pressure, temperature and pain

200

What part of the brain has the job of putting all the sensory information together and acting upon it?

The thalamus then it goes to

Cerebral cortex for further processing

200

What is the function of cones in our eyes?

They detect color and detailed vision

200

This is the bulb in your nose that detects small bits of molecules and communicates with the brain

the Olfactory bulb

200

Even when you see this object from different angles, such as a rectangle turning into a trapezoid on your retina, you still recognize its true form.

What is Shape Constancy

200

This monocular depth cue involves the tendency to perceive parallel lines converging in the distance, providing cues about the relative distance of objects.

What is linear perspective (Just perspective is also fine)

200

How does Gate theory work to reduce pain?

flooding brain with other stimulus blocks some pain messages

250

What is the minimum amount of difference to detect that two stimuli are not the same?

difference threshold

250

This is a transparent structure that changes shape to focus images on the retina.

The Lens

250

The official term for the sense of smell

olfaction

250

This phenomenon explains why a white piece of paper still appears white whether in a brightly lit room or under dim candlelight.

What is Brightness constancy?

250

This visual phenomenon, essential for depth perception, occurs because each eye receives a slightly different image due to their distinct positions, allowing the brain to perceive depth and three-dimensional space. What is it? 

Retinal disparity

250

What are our kinesthetic senses responsible for?

Sense that tells us the position and motion of our body parts

300

What is the minimum amount of stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus?

What is the absolute threshold

300

This term describes the sharpness of your vision

Visual Acuity

300

List the 5 different taste categories

salty, sweet, sour, bitter, umami

300

What was the key finding from the reading "What you see is what you've learned" about perceptual constancies

Perceptual constancies are learned not inborn

300

List 3/6 of the monocular cues for vision

  1. perspective

  2. clearness

  3. overlapping

  4. shadow

  5. gradient texture   

  6. Motion Parallax

300

This organ in the inner ear is responsible for telling you that you are physically upright without your eyesight or balance.

Semi-Circular Canals

(Vestibular system)