AP Psych Module 16-21-sensation/perception/eyes/ears
Tresholds
Absolute and Difference
Extrasensory Perception
Clairvoyance (perceiving remote events) telepathy (mind-mind communication) precognition (read future) psychokinesis (mind over matter) 50% of Americans believe in ESP No scientific evidence, high likelihood of chance
Parallel Processing
Doing more than one thing at a time Divides info into subdivisions
Gestalt Psychology
Gestalt:german word for form/whole an organized whole; our minds tend to integrate pieces of info into meaningful wholes whole exceeds sum of its parts
Supercell
Info passes to other cortical areas where team of cells (supercell cluster) respond to more complex patterns
Bottom Up Processing
Info processing that begins at sensory receptors and works up to the perception ability of the brain Used when have no prior experience
Top Down Processing
Info processing where perception is constricted based off prior experiences and expectations
Sensory Adaption
Longer exposure you have to a consistent stimulus, the less aware of it we become due to neurons firing less Ex.clothes on body, smells in a candle store
Retina
Multilayered tissue on eyeball's inner surface Receptor cells convert light energy to neural impulses and forward this to brain which reassembles images where we begin to process visual info
Nearsightedness vs Farsightedness
Nearsightedness- occurs because lens focuses image in front of retina Farsightedness-occurs because lens focuses image behind the retina
Optic Nerve
Nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain Optic chasm send info from left eye to right hemisphere and vice versa
Sensations of Touch
Pressure-tickled 2+ adjacent pressure pts Cold Warmth-cold and warmth=hot Pain-gentle touch=itchy
Pathway to the brain
The optic nerves leave the eyes and cross each other at the optic chasum. From here, the "right side optic nerve" signals go to the left and the "left side optic nerve" signals to the right. They are routed through the thalamus. Fibers are routed from there to the visual cortex of the occipital lobe
Perception
The process of organize and interpret sensory info Enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events Making sense of what stimulated our sensory receptors
Opponent Processing Theory
These are opposing, 2 color process in the retina and Thalamus 1.Red-green 2.Yellow-blue 3.White-black Neural fatigue
Young Helmholtz Trichromatic Theory
Three types of cones/color receptors in the brain : Red, green, blue All colors are a combination of these three being activated
Conversions of Energy Light Energy Sound Waves Chemical Energy Pressure, Vibration, Texture Balance/Orientation in space
Vision Hearing Taste and smell Touch Proprioception/Kinesthetic Awareness
Experiences change based on emotion
When sad more likely to perceive a word as sad or a scene When angry more likely to see neutral things as aggressive
Perceptual Set
a mental dispostion to perceive one things and not another similiar to priming ex. folk, cloak, soak, what's the white part of an egg? person will say yoak
Signal Detection Theory
a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus amid background stimulation Stimuli detection depends on person's experience expectations, motivations, and alertness Assumes no single absolute threshold Stimuli must involve synchronized activity in the brain to reach consciousness
Perceptual Adaption
ability to adjust to an artificially displaced or inverted visual field
Ganglion Cells
activated by bipolar cells
Pain
allows us to adjust out bodies and alerts us to damage Nociceptors work as thresholds-only fire when detect harmful amounts of temperature/pressure/chemicals remember peak moment/how much pain we feel at the end cultural expectations/presence of others
Cones
allows you to see fine detail, color function in daylight/well lit environments
Shape and Size Constancy
an object's shape/size stays the same with changes in distance from object
Relative Motion
as we move, objects that are stable may appear to move
Auditory Nerve
axons connect hair cells to the auditory nerve impulses sent to thalamus and then auditory cortex can hear 2 different versions of our voice
Volley Principle
both theories are true in different situations neural cells can alternate firing
Fovea
central focus point of retina
Inner Ear
cochlea, semicircular canals, vestibular sacs
Iris
color muscle surrounding the pupil that dialates/constricts in response to light/emotions
Middle Ear
consists of three tiny bones-hammer, anvil, stirrup pick up vibrations cause this to vibrate
Brightness Constancy
constant brightness as illumination changes
Conductive Hearing Loss
damage to the mechanical structures which conduct sound to the cochlea
Stroop Effect
demonstration of inference time words and colors example
Monocular Cues
depth cues, such as interposition and linear perspective, available to either eye alone
Binocular Cues
depth cues, such as retinal disparity, that depend on the use of two eyes judging the distance of two nearby objects
Rods
detect black, white, grey, and heaviest involved with darkness-peripheral share bipolar cells
Amplitude (sound)
determines the loudness
Frequency (sound)
determines the pitch long waves-->low frequency-->low pitch short waves-->high frequency-->high pitch
Frequency Theory
differences in pitch are due to rate of neural impulses traveling up the auditory nerve explains low pitch very well
Place Theory
differences in pitch result from stimulation of different areas of the cochlea's basilar membrane explains high pitch very well high pitch:large vibrations near the beginning of membrane low pitch:vibrate more of membrane, including end
Wavelength
distance from peak to peak of light/sound wave determines the hue
What causes red eye in a photo?
eyes haven't adapted to flashes of light so flash goes all the way back and shows retina
Change Blindness
failing to notice change in the environment
Inattentional Blindness
failing to see visible objects when our attention is focused elsewhere ex.change blindness
Closure
fill gaps to create a complete, whole object
Lens
focuses incoming light into an image on the retina
Selective Attention Cocktail Party Effect ADHD
focusing our conscious awareness on a particular stimulus while all other stimulus are processed unconsciously divided attention ex.Cocktail Party effect-we can drown out all the surrounding convos to focus on ours but we unconsciously hear things like your name from across the room ex.ADHD-inablitity to selectively focus our attention;attempt to focus on all stimuli at once driving and texting/talking vs driving and talking to passenger?
Depth Perception
from the two dimensional image hitting our retinas, we construct a three dimensional image in our brains allows us to judge danger of an incoming car or height of house
Relative Size
if we assume two objects are similar in size, most people perceive the one that casts the smaller retinal image as farther away
Phi Phenomenon
illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on & off in quick succession
Earphones and Music
iphones:70% volume is 90-100 decibels using often can lead to having the hearing of 50 year old by the time you're in your 20's
Bipolar Cells
light energy chemical changes that's spark neural signals activating this exist between photoreceptors and ganglion cells
60/60 Rule
listen to 60% volume for 60 min then take a break
Sound
measured in decibels absolute threshold 0 decibles-means the min amount of sound
Oval Window
membrane at the beginning of the cochlea vibrates in response to signals received from the middle ear, vibrations jostle liquid
Absolute Thresholds
min stimulation necessary to detect light, sound, pressure, taste and order 50% of the time
Feature Detectors
nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus such as shape, angle, and movement
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
nerve deafness damage to the hair cells and auditory nerves (furniture on carpet) repeated exposure to loud noises lead to this cochlear implants transmit electrical signals from transmitter on the scalp to cochlea into nerve itself through electrode
Interposition
one object partially blocks our view of another
Figure and Ground
organization of the visual field into objects(figures) that stand out from their surroundings(ground)
Pinna
outer ear a flap of cartilage which channels sound waves down into the auditory canal
Auditory Canal
outer ear canal that hold the Tympanic Membrane (eardrum) sound waves cause this membrane to vibrate
Hearing Process
outer ear to eardrum to middle ear to cochlea to basilar membrane to hair cells to auditory nerve to auditory cortex
Linear Perspective
parallel lines appear to meet in the distance
Continuity
perceive smooth, continuous patterns
Color Constancy
perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color even if changing illumination alters the wavelength reflected by the object
Perceptual Constancy
perceiving objects as unchanging even as illumination and retinal images change
Grouping
perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups
Importance of Touch
physical/emotional development premature babies can gain weight/leave hospital sooner if touched more
Blind Spot
point at which optic nerve leaves the eye creating a blindspot because no receptor cells are located here
Cornea
protects the eye and bends light to focus
Transduction
receive sensory stimulation (w/in certain range) transform that stimulation into a neural impulse Deliver that neural impulse to our brains
Schemas
representation of a plan or theory in the form of an outline or model
Photoreceptor Cells
rods, cones
Basilar Membrane
runs through liquid of cochlea, lined with sensory receptors called hair cells, moving liquid bends hair cells which creates neural impulses
Audition
sense/act of hearing hear the range/frequency of the human voice best
Light and Shadow
shading produces a sense of depth consistent with our assumption that light comes from above
Pupil
small adjustable opening lets light pass through
Cochlea
snail shaped tube in the inner ear filled with liquid
Subliminal Stimuli
stimuli you cannot detect 50% of the time below absolute threshold
Psychophysics
study of relationship between the physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological experience of them
Context Effects
the context you find yourself in will effect how you perceive a situation
Difference Threshold
the min difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the time
Sensation
the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system RECIEVE and REPRESENT stimulus energies from our enviroment
Weber's Law
two stimuli must differ by a constant min % to be precieved
Processing Visual Info
visual info goes to neural layers goes to rods/cones goes to bipolar cells goes to ganglion cells goes to optic nerve goes to brain
Amplitude (vision)
wave height determines a color's intensity/brightness
Cocktail Party Effect
we can drown out all the surrounding convos to focus on ours but we unconsciously hear things like your name from across the room
Proximity
we group nearby figures ex. II II II we will see those lines in 3 groups of 2's
Stereophonic Hearing
we hear "three dimensionally" sound on the right/left reach corresponding ear slightly before reaching the other ears are sensitive enough to distinguish where sound comes from
Relative Height
we perceive objects higher in field of vision as farther away
Experiences change based on motivation
when hungry more likely to see food as more delicious when tired more likely to see distances as longer
Every 10 decibels corresponds to a tenfold increase in sound intensity
whisper-20 normal conversation-60 dangerous-80-85 damaging-100 loud concert-115 pain-125 12 gauge shotgun-165
Nociceptors
work as thresholds-only fire when detect harmful amounts of temperature/pressure/chemicals