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Rockets AP Psychology Chapter 4

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242836037sensationthe process by which stimulation of a sensory receptor produces neural impulses that the brain interprets as a sound, a visual image, an odor, a taste, a pain, or other sensory image. Sensation represents the first series of steps in processing of incoming information
242836038perceptiona process that makes sensory patterns meaningful. It is perception that makes these words meaningful, rather than just a string of visual patterns. To make this happen, perception draws heavily on memory, motivation, emotion, and other psychological processes
242836039transductiontransformation of one form of energy into another-especially the transformation of stimulus information into nerve signals by the sense organs. Without transduction, ripe tomatoes would not appear red (or pinking-gray, in the case of tomatoes purchased in many grocery stores)
242836040sensory adaptationloss of responsiveness in receptor cells that after stimulation has remained unchanged for a while, as when a swimmer becomes adapted to the temperature of the water
242836041absolute thresholdthe amount of stimulation necessary for a stimulus to be detected. In practice, this means that the presence or absence of a stimulus is detected correctly half the time over many trials
242836042difference thresholdThe smallest amount by which a stimulus can be changed and the difference be detected half the time
242836043just noticeable difference(JND) same as the difference threshold
242836044Weber's lawthis concept says that the size of a JND is proportional to the intensity of the stimulus; the JND is large when the stimulus intensity is high and is small when the stimulus intensity is low
242836045Fechner's lawthe magnitude of a stimulus can be estimated by the formula S=k log R, where S= sensation, R = stimulus, and k= a constant that differs for each sensory modality (sight, touch, temperature, etc.)
242836046Steven's power lawa law of magnitude estimation that is more accurate than Fechner's law and covers a wider variety of stimuli. It is represented by the formula S=kla, where S= sensation, k= a constant, I= stimulus intensity, and a= a power exponent that depends on the sense being measured
242836047signal detection theoryexplains how we detect "signals," consisting of stimulation affecting our eyes, ears, nose, skin, and other sense organs. Signal detection theory says that sensation is judgment the sensory system makes about incoming stimulation. Often, it occurs outside of consciousness. In contrast to older theories from psychophysics, signal detection theory takes observer characteristics into account
242836048retinathe thin, light-sensitive layer at the back of the eyeball. The retina contains millions of photoreceptors and other nerve cells
242836049photoreceptorslight-sensitive cells (neurons) in the retina that convert light energy to neural impulses. The photoreceptors are as far as light gets into the visual system
242836050rodsphotoreceptors in the retina that are especially sensitive to dim light but not to colors
242836051conesphotoreceptors in the retina that are especially to colors but not to dim light
242836052foveathe tiny area of sharpest vision in the retina
242836053optic nervethe bundle of neurons that carries visual information from the retina to the brain
242836054blind spotthe point where the optic nerve exits the eye and where there are no photoreceptors. Any stimulus that falls on this area cannot be seen
242836055brightnessa psychological sensation caused by the intensity of light waves
242836056coloralso called hue. Color is not a property of things in the external world. Rather, it is a psychological sensation created in the brain from information obtained by the eyes from the wavelengths of visible light
242836057electromagnetic spectrumthe entire range of electromagnetic energy, including radio waves, X rays, microwaves, and visible light
242836058visible spectrumthe tiny part of the electromagnetic spectrum to which our eyes are sensitive. The visible spectrum of other creatures may be slightly different from our own
242836059trichromatic theorythe idea that colors are sensed by three different types of cones sensitive to light in the red, blue, and green wavelengths. The trichromatic theory explains the earliest stage of color sensation
242836060opponent-process theorythe idea that cells in the visual system process colors in complementary pairs, such as red or green or as yellow or blue. The opponent-process theory explains color sensation from the bipolar cells onward in the visual system
242836061afterimagessensations that linger after the stimulus is removed. Most visual images are negative afterimages, which appear in reversed color
242836062color blindnessTypically a genetic disorder (although sometimes the result of trauma, as in the case of Jonathan) that prevents an individual from discriminating certain colors. The most common form is rd-green color blindness
242836063frequencyThe number of cycles completed by a wave in a given amount of time, usually a second
242836064amplitudethe physical strength of a wave. This is usually measured from peak (top) to valley (bottom) on a graph of the wave
242836065tympanic membranethe eardrum
242836066cochleathe primary organ of hearing; a coiled tube in the inner ear, where sound waves are transduced into nerve messages
242836067basilar membranea thin strip of tissue sensitive to vibrations in the cochlea. The basilar membrane contains hair cells connected to neurons. When a sound wave causes the hair cells to vibrate, the associated neurons become exited. As a result, the sound waves are converted (transduced) into nerve activity
242836068pitchthe sensory characteristic of sound produced by the frequency of the sound wave
242836069loudnessa sensory characteristic of sound produced by the amplitude (intensity) of the sound wave
242836070timbrethe quality of a sound wave that derives from the wave's complexity (combination of pure tones). Timbre comes from the Greek word for "drum", as does the term tympanic membrane, or eardrum
242836071conduction deafnessan inability to hear resulting from damage to structures of the middle or inner ear
242836072nerve deafness (sensorineural deafness)an inability to hear, linked to a deficit in the body's ability to transmit impulses from the cochlea to the brain, usually involving the auditory nerve or higher auditory processing centers
242836073vestibular sensethe sense of body orientation with respect to gravity. The vestibular sense is closely associated with the inner ear and, in fact, is carried to the brain on a branch of the auditory nerve
242836074kinesthetic sensethe sense of body position and movement of body parts relative to each other (also called kinesthesis)
242836075olfactionthe sense of smell
242836076pheromoneschemical signals released by organisms to communicate with other members of their species. Pheromones are often used by animals as sexual attractants. It is unclear whether or not humans employ pheromones.
242836077gustationthe sense of taste- from the same word as "gusto" - also called the gustatory sense
242836078skin sensessensory systems for processing touch, warmth, cold, texture, and pain
242836079gate-control theoryan explanation for pain control that proposes we have a neural "gate" that can, under some circumstances, block incoming pain signals
242836080placebo effecta response to a placebo (fake drug), caused by subjects' belief that they are taking real drugs
242836081perceptthe meaningful product of perception- often an image that has been associated with concepts, memories of events, emotions, and motives
242836082feature detectorscells in the cortex that specialize in extracting certain features of a stimulus
242836083binding problemrefers to the process used by the brain to combine (or "bind") the results of many sensory operations into a single percept. This occurs, for example, when sensations of color, shape, boundary, and texture are combined to produce the percept of a person's face. No one knows exactly how the brain does this. Thus the binding problem is one of the major unsolved mysteries in psychology
242836084bottom-up processingperceptual analysis that emphasizes characteristic of the stimulus, rather than our concepts and expectations. "Bottom" refers to the stimulus, which occurs at step one of perceptual processing
242836085top-down processingperceptual analysis that emphasizes the perceiver's expectations, concept memories, and other cognitive factors, rather than being driven by the characteristics of the stimulus. "Top" refers to a mental set in the brain- which stands at the "top" of the perceptual processing system
242836086perceptual consistencythe ability to recognize the same object as remaining "constant" under different conditions, such as changes in illumination, distance, or location
242836087illusionyou have experienced an illusion when you have demonstrably incorrect perception of a stimulus patter, especially one that also fools others who are observing the same stimulus. (If no one else sees it the way you do, you could be having a delusion or a hallucination.)
242836088ambiguous figureimages that are capable of more than one interpretation. There is no "right" way to see an ambiguous figure
242836089Gestalt psychologyfrom a German word (pronounced gush-TAWLT) that means "whole" or "form" or "configuration." (A Gestalt is also a percept.) The Gestalt psychologists believed that much of perception is shaped by innate factors built into the brain
242836090figurethe part of a pattern that commands attention. The figure stands out against the ground
242836091groundthe part of a pattern that does not command attention; the background
242836092closurethe Gestalt principle that identifies the tendency to fill in gaps in figures and to see incomplete figures as complete
242836093law of perceptual groupingthe Gestalt principles of similarity, proximity, continuity, and common fate. These "laws" suggest how our brains prefer to group stimulus elements together from a percept (Gestalt)
242836094law of similaritythe Gestalt principle that we tend to group similar objects together in our perceptions
242836095law of proximitythe Gestalt principle that we tend to group objects together when they are near each other. Proximity means "nearness."
242836096law of continuitythe Gestalt principle that we prefer perceptions of connected and continuous figures to disconnected and disjointed ones
242836097law of common fatethe Gestalt principle that we tend to group similar objects together that share a common motion or destination
242836098law of Pragnanzthe most general Gestalt principle, which states that the simplest organization, requiring the least cognitive effort, will emerge as the figure. Pragnanz shares a common root with pregnant, and so it carries the idea of a "fully developed figure." That is, our perceptual system prefers to see a fully developed Gestalt, such as a complete circle- as opposed to a broken circle
242836099binocular cuesinformation taken in by both eyes that aids in depth perception, including binocular convergence and retinal disparity
242836100monocular cuesinformation about depth that relies on the input of just one eye- includes relative size, light, and shadow, interposition, relative motion, and atmospheric perspective
242836101learning-based inferencethe view that perception is primarily shaped by learning (or experience), rather than by innate factors
242836102perceptual setreadiness to detect a particular stimulus in a given context- as when a person who is afraid interprets an unfamiliar sound in the night as a threat

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