Module 18: VISION
A door casts an increasingly trapezoidal image on our retinas as it opens, yet we still perceive it as rectangular. This illustrates shape _____.
Constantcy
Our tendency to organize stimuli into coherent sets is known as _____.
Grouping
Brad was struck by a two-by-four to the back of his head. He is having severe difficulties with his _____ because the injury he sustained was to his occipital lobe.
Vision
Afterimages are BEST explained by:
opponent-process theory.
Jess was in a serious car accident and is having trouble recognizing familiar faces. She MOST likely suffered damage to her _____ lobe, just behind her right ear.
Temporal
What was the ultimate result of Stratton's experiment on perceptual adaptation? Please choose the correct answer from the following choices, and then select the submit answer button. A. He went into a deep depression. B. He was eventually able to perform most daily tasks. C. He found that he never could adapt to the glasses. D. He suffered from insomnia.
B.
Researchers used goggles to restrict kittens' vision for several months. Once the goggles were removed, the kittens:
Could distinguish only color
As you watch a dog play in the park, light reflected from the dog's fur first passes through three structures of your eye. In what order does the light pass through these structures? A. cornea, iris, pupil B. pupil, iris, lens C. fovea, iris, pupil D. cornea, pupil, lens
D
Denise wears an extremely bright safety yellow sweatshirt when she cycles to the gym after dark. The sweatshirt's brightness reflects the _____ of the light it reflects. A. long wavelength B. low amplitude C. short wavelength D. high amplitude
D
As you walk into a brightly lit room, the black structure in the center of your eye seems to shrink to a tiny black dot. This response is caused by the action of the eye structure called the:
Iris
Railroad tracks appear to converge in the distance. This provides a cue for depth perception known as _____.
Linear perspective
Jasmine was in a serious car accident. She suffered damage to her temporal lobe, just behind her right ear. What kind of problems might this cause for her?
Trouble recognizing familiar faces
Suppose each pixel on a television screen or computer monitor codes the color of an image at that point in terms of red, blue, and green values. This closely resembles the way that:
color is represented in the retina
The transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina is called the:
lens
Relative luminance MOST clearly contributes to:
lightness constancy
In terms of vision, _____ is the ability to adjust to an artificially displaced or inverted visual field.
perceptual adaptation
Psychologist George Stratton conducted a famous experiment on perceptual adaptation in which he: A. wore a pair of glasses that inverted his vision for eight days. B.spent two weeks in a sensory-deprivation chamber. C. spent a week under heavy sedation. D. stayed in a room that was completely dark for one month.
A
Relative height, motion, size, and linear perspective are examples of: A. monocular cues. B .motion perception. C. perceptual constancy. D. binocular cues.
A
According to the Gestalt psychologists, humans tend to group together figures that are near to each other. This is called the principle of: A. proximity. B. continuity. C. similarity. D. connectedness.
A.
Eleanor suffered severe stroke damage near the rear of both sides of her brain. Based on the case study of "Mrs. M." described in the textbook, the stroke is MOST likely to impair Eleanor's ability to perceive:
Motion