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100

The minimum amount of stimulation needed for a person to detect a stimulus 50% of the time

Absolute threshold

100

The process of converting physical energy from the environment (like light or sound) into neuralchemical signals that the brain can understand and interpret.

Transduction

100

The smallest amount by which two stimuli must differ for a person to perceive them as different 50% of the time.

Just-Noticeable Difference (JND)

100

The process where sensory systems become less sensitive to a constant, unchanging stimulus over time

Sensory Adaptation

100

Neurological condition where one sense triggers another, such as seeing colors when hearing music.

Synesthesia (Sensory interaction)

200

Light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye that contains photoreceptor cells (rods and cones)

Retina

200

The sensation of pain or other feelings in an amputated limb

Phantom Limb
200

The ability of an organism to discover the location of something producing sound waves based on things like intensity and timing.

Sound Localization

200

Chemical substances secreted by animals (including humans) that have an effect on behavior or physiology within their own species.

Pheromones

200

The system responsible for balance and movement. It uses fluid-filled structures in the inner ear.

Vestibular sense

300

A permanent hearing impairment caused by damage to the inner ear's hair cells or the auditory nerve

Sensorineural deafness

300

The sense of taste

Gustation: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, umami,

oleogustus (fat)

300

A vision condition where distant objects appear blurry because the eye focuses images in front of the retina instead of directly on it.

Nearsightedness

300

Small area in the retina where there are no photoreceptor cells there 

Blind Spot

300

The process where the eye becomes more sensitive to light when moving from a bright to a dim environment

Dark Adaptation

400

How the visual system processes color in three opposing pairs: red-green, blue-yellow, and black-white.

Opponent-Process theory

400

Visual sensations that persist after the original stimulus has been removed

Afterimages

400

Photoreceptor cells in the retina responsible for color vision and sharp, detailed perception in bright light

Cones

400

The central pit in the retina that provides the sharpest, most detailed vision.

Fovea

400

Proposes that color vision is made possible by three types of cone receptors in the retina, each sensitive to different wavelengths of light: red, green, and blue

Trichromatic Theory

500

The highness or lowness of a sound, determined by its frequency

Pitch

500

The theory which suggests the brain perceives pitch based on the speed at which neurons in the auditory system fire to match the frequency of sound waves.

Frequency Theory

500

A type of color vision deficiency where an individual can only perceive two out of the three color pairs

Dichromatism

500

The theory which suggests that we perceive sound pitch based on the location of hair cell stimulation along the basilar membrane in the cochlea.

Place theory

500

The theory which proposes that pain is modulated by a "gate" in the spinal cord that can be opened or closed by a combination of physical and psychological factors

Gate Control Theory