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Conditioning
Sensation & Perception
Vision
Audition
Chemical & Bodily Senses
100
A dog salivating when bell has rung is an example of ____________.
What is Classical Conditioning?
100
Detects physical energy from the environment and encodes it into neural activity
What is Sensation?
100
The ability to see objects in 3D even though images that strike the retina are 2D
What is depth perception?
100
The distance between two successive peaks.
What is wavelength?
100
Small and Large nerve fibers allow or block pain signals.
What is gate control theory of pain?
200
The order of stimulus presentation
What is CS + US = CR?
200
Selects, organizes, and interprets sensory information
What is Perception?
200
Depth cues, such as retinal disparity, that depend on the use of two eyes.
What are binocular cues?
200
The three delicate bones located in the middle ear.
What are the hammer, anvil, and stirrup?
200
To tell you something has gone wrong and motivates one to minimize contact with a particular stimulus.
What is the function of pain?
300
Changes in behavior that result from its consequences
What is Operant Conditioning?
300
The two kinds of perception
What are Top-down and Bottom-up processing?
300
Perceiving objects a unchanging
What is perceptual constancy?
300
Important for transduction. Auditory hair cells that transduce pressure waves in the cochlea fluid into neural activity.
What is basilar membrane?
300
Bumps on the tongue which contain taste buds.
What are pillae?
400
The five aspects of Classical Conditioning
What are Acquisition, Extinction, Spontaneous Recovery, Generalization, Discrimination?
400
Spatial coding of different stimuli
What is Anatomical coding?
400
The ability to adjust to an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field.
What is perceptual adaptation?
400
This frequency vibrates the tip of the membrane. The hair cells releasing small amount of neurotransmitters.
What is low frequency?
400
The system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts.
What is kinesthesis?
500
The four aspects that of Operant Conditioning
What are Shaping Behavior, Reinforcement, Interval Schedules, Punishment?
500
Coding of information in terms of firing rate.
What is temporal coding?
500
Depth cues, such as interposition and linear perspective, available to either eye alone.
What are monocular cues?
500
This frequency has a number of hair cells which determine the firing rate. The louder it is, the more hair cells release neurotransmitters.
What is low frequency?
500
Responsible for our balance and contains the semicircular canals and vesibular sacs.
What are vestibular senses?