AP Psychology Unit 4 Part 1
Trichromatic Theory
(Young-Hemholz Theory) Proposed mechanism for color vision with cones that are differentially sensitive to different wavelengths of light; each color you see results from specific ration of activation amount the three types of receptors
Stimulus
A change in the environment that can be detected by sensory receptors
Acuity
Ability to detect fine details, sharpness of vision; can be affected by small distortions in the shape of the eye
Binocular Cues
Clues about distance (requiring two eyes)
Iris
Colored muscle surrounding the pupil that regulates the size of the pupil opening
Weber's Law
Difference thresholds increase in proportion to the size of the stimulus
Dark Adaptation
Increased visual sensitivity that gradually develops when it gets dark.
Top Down Processing
Information processing guided by your preexisting knowledge or expectation to construct perceptions; is concept-driven.
Bottom Up Processing
Information processing that begins with sensory receptors and works up to the brain's integration of sensory information to construct perceptions; is data-driven
Retina
Light sensitive surface in the back of the eye containing rods and cones that transducer light energy - also has layers of bipolar cells and ganglion cells that transmit visual information to the brain
Signal Detection Theory
Maintain that minimum threshold varies with fatigue, attention, expectations, motivation, emotional distress, and from one person to another.
Difference Threshold
Minimum difference between any two stimuli that a person can detect 50% of the time
Photoreceptors
Modified neurons (rods and cones) that convert light energy to electrochemical neural impulses
Optic Nerve
Nerve formed by ganglion cell axons; carries the neural impulses from the eye to he thalamus of the brain
Just Noticeable Difference (JND)
Our experience of the difference threshold
Response Bias
Our readiness to report detection of a stimulus when we are uncertain of its presence
Rods
Photoreceptors that detect black, white, and gray and that detect movement - rods are necessary for peripheral and dim-light vision when cones do not correspond - distributed throughout the retina, except none are in the fovea
Cones
Photoreceptors that detect color and fine detail in daylight or n bright-light conditions - most concentrated at the fovea of the retina, none are in the periphery where the roads are located
Accommodation
Process of changing the curvature of the lens to focus light rays on the retina
Opponent-process
Proposed mechanism fro color vision with opposing retinal processes for red-green, yellow-blue, white-black; some retinal cells are stimulated by one pair and inhibited by the other
Visible Spectrum
Range of color (hues) perceived by humans
Subliminal Stimulation
Receiving messages that are below one's absolute threshold for conscious awareness
Blind Spot
Region of the Retina where the optic nerve leaves the eye so there are no receptor cells; creates an area with no vision
Bipolar Cells
Second layer of neurons in the retina that transmit impulses from rods and cones to ganglion cells.
Pupil
Small adjustable opening in the iris that is smaller in bright light and larger in darkness
Receptor
Specialized nerve ending; responsible for detecting specific stimuli
Lens
Structure behind the pupil that changes shape, becoming more spherical or flatter to focus incoming rays into an image on the light sensitive retina
Sensory Adaptation
Temporary decrease in sensitivity to a stimulus that occurs when stimulation is unchanging
Sensation
The process by which you detect physical energy from your environment and encode it as neural signals
Perception
The process of selecting, organizing, and interpreting sensations, enabling you to recognize meaningful objects
Attention
The set of processes by which you choose from among that various stimuli bombarding your sense at any instant, allowing some to be further processed by your senses and brain
Attention
The set of processes form which you choose among the various stimuli bombarding our sense at any instant, allowing some to be further processed by your sense and brain.
Absolute Threshold
The weakest level of a stimulus that can be correctly detected at least half the time
Ganglion Cells
Third layer of neurons in the retina, whose axons converge to form the optic nerve.
Farsighted
Too little curvature of the cornea and/or lens focuses the image behind the retina, so distant objects are seen more clearly than near objects
Nearsighted
Too much curvature of the cornea and/or lens focuses image in front of the retina so nearby objects are seen more clearly than distant objects
Cornea
Transparent, curved layer in the front of the eye that bends incoming light rays
Amplitude
height of a sound wave