Chapter.5 The Perceiving Mind (1)

The process of detecting environmental stimuli or stimuli arising from the body.
Sensation
Perception
The process of interpreting sensory information.
Sensation
Perception
The translation of incoming sensory information into neural signals.
Transduction
Perception
The tendency to pay less attention to a nonchanging source of stimulation.
Sensory adaption
Perception adaption
Perception based on building simple input into more complex perceptions.
Bottom-up processing
Top-down processing
A perceptual process in which memory and other cognitive processes are required for interpreting incoming sensory information.
Bottom-up processing
Top-down processing
Dogs apparently see blues, yellows, and grays.
Cierto
Falso
The study of relationships between the physical qualities of stimuli and the subjective responses they produce.
Absolute threshold
Psychophysics
The smallest amount of stimulus that can be detected.
Absolute threshold
Difference threshold
The smallest detectable difference between two stimuli.
Absolute threshold
Difference threshold
Signal detection - The analysis of sensory and decision-making processes in the detection of faint, uncertain stimuli.
Cierto
Falso
What is an example of Absolute threshold?
Seeing light from a candle flame 30 miles away on a dark night
Being able to detect the difference between two different weights.
A radiologist correctly detecting cancer from a mammogram
What is an example of Difference threshold?
Seeing light from a candle flame 30 miles away on a dark night
Being able to detect the difference between two different weights.
A radiologist correctly detecting cancer from a mammogram
What is an example of Signal detection?
Seeing light from a candle flame 30 miles away on a dark night
A radiologist correctly detecting cancer from a mammogram
Being able to detect the difference between two different weights.
The sense that allows us to process reflected light.
Vision
Cornea
The clear surface at the front of the eye that begins the process of directing light to the retina.
Vision
Cornea
An opening formed by the iris.
Cornea
Pupil
The brightly colored circular muscle surrounding the pupil of the eye.
Pupil
Iris
The clear structure behind the pupil that bends light towards the retina.
Lens
Cornea
Retina
Layers of visual processing cells in the back of the eye.
Retina
Cornea
Large-amplitude waves appear bright, and low-amplitude waves appear dim.
Cierto
Falso
50% of our Cerebral cortex processes visual information.
Cierto
Falso
Gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet rays, infrared rays, microwaves, and radio waves lie outside the capacities of the human eye.
Cierto
Falso
Approximately 50% of our cerebral cortex processes visual information, in comparison to only 3% for hearing and 11% for touch and pain.
I have read this.
Light entering the eye travels through the cornea, pupil, and lens before reaching the retina. Among the landmarks on the retina are the fovea, which is specialized for seeing fine detail, and the optic disk, where blood vessels enter the eye and the optic nerves exits the eye.
Cierto
Falso
An area of the retina that is specialized for highly detailed vision.
Fovea
Optic disk
A photoreceptor specialized to detect dim light.
Rod
Cone
A photoreceptor in the retina that processes color and fine detail.
Rod
Cone
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