CLPS Exam 1
top down v.s bottom up processing
Top Down: the influence of later stages on the processing of earlier ones (eg: memory influences perception)
area V4 v.s V5
V4: region associated with color perception V5: region associated with motion perception
syndrome
a cluster of different symptoms that are believed to be related in some meaningful way
diaschisis
a discrete brain lesion can disrupt the functioning of distant brain regions that are structurally intact
structural descriptions
a memory representation of the three-dimensional structure of objects
scotoma
a small region of cortical blindness
split brain
a surgical procedure in which fibers of the corpus callosum are severed
blindsight
a symptom in which the patient reports not being able to consciously see stimuli in a particular region but can nevertheless perform visual discriminations accurately
akinetopsia v.s achromatopsia
achromotopsia: failure to perceive color (world in grayscale) -- not colorblindness which is due to cone deficit akinetopsia: failure to perceive visual motion
information processing
an approach in which behavior is described in terms of a sequence of cognitive stages
subtractive logic/ cognition subtraction
an aspect of experimental design involving the comparison of two conditions or brain states that are presumed to differ in only one discrete feature
apperceptive v.s associative agnosia
apperceptive: failure to understand the meaning of objects due to a deficit at level of object perception agnosia: failure to understand the meaning of objects due to deficit at the level of semantic memory
reductionism
belief that the mind based concepts will eventually be replaced by neuroscientific concepts
quadrantrantopia
cortical blindness restricted to a quarter of the visual field
hemianopia
cortical blindness restricted to one half of the visual field (associated with damage to the primary visual cortex in one hemisphere)
functional integration v.s function specialization
functional integration: the way in which different regions communicate with each other functional specialization: different areas of the brain specialized for different functions
group v.s single case study
group: the performance of different patients is combined to yield a group average single: data from different patients is not combined
association
impaired on task 1 and also impaired on task 2 - uses the same neural resources
independent v.s dependent variable
independent: variable being manipulated, dependent: variable that changes in response
interactivity v.s modularity
interactivity: later stages of processing can begin before earlier stages are complete (not strictly separate) modularity: the notion that certain cog processes are restricted in the type of info the process
ipsilateral v.s contralateral projections
ipsilateral projects project to the same side as it originates, contralateral projects to the opposite side
dual aspect theory
mind and brain are two levels of description of the same thing
integrative v.s object orientation agnosia
object orientation: inability to extract orientation of object despite adequate object recognition integrative: disorder in which the patient has symptoms of both apperceptive agnosia and associative agnosia, although their primary visual abilities are intact.
hierarchical/serial v.s parallel processing
parallel: different information processed at the same time (vision and auditory processed simultaneously in different places) hierarchical: one cognitive domain processes one function starting from minimal details up to higher complex details
blind spots
part of the retina with a lack of cones and rods directly where the optic nerve exits
invasiveness
refers to method that utilizes break in skin
rods v.s cones
rods: photoreceptors that are not color sensitive, cones: photoreceptors that are color sensitive
dualism
seeing mind and body as two different things that interact
sensation v.s perception
sensation = the effects of a stimulus on the sensory organs. perception= the elaboration and interpretation of a sensory stimulus based on, for example, knowledge of how objects are structured
repetitive v.s single pulse TMS
single pulse: used to explore brain functioning repetitive: used to induce changes in brain activity that can last beyond the stimulation period
single v.s double dissociation
single: patient is impaired on one task but not another double: two single dissociations that are opposite in two patients
category specificity
the notion that the brain represents different categories in different ways or different regions
optic chiasm
the part of the retinal projection at which the nasal retinas of each eye cross over
receptive field
the particular region in which a stimulus will modify the firing of that neuron
figure ground segregation
the process of segmenting a visual display into objects versus background surfaces
task resource v.s task demand artifact
task resource: dissociation may be caused by the fact that one task is harder and uses the neural resource more task demand: dissociation may caused by fact that one task is performed subpotentially (distracted or something)
biological motion
the ability to detect whether a stimulus is animate or not from movement cues alone
temporal resolution
the accuracy with which one can measure WHEN an event (a physiological change) occurs
spatial resolution
the accuracy with which one can measure WHERE an event is occuring
color constancy
the color of a surface is perceived as constant even when illuminated in different lighting conditions
domain specificity (chap 1)
the idea that a cognitive process is dedicated solely to one particular type of function
visual expertise
training your brain based on seeing certain stimuli many many times
object constancy
understanding that objects remain the same, irrespective of differences in viewing condition
dorsal v.s ventral streams
ventral: pathway extending from occipital lobes to the temporal lobes involving object recognition, memory and semantics dorsal: a pathway extending from the occipital lobes to the parietal lobes involved in visually guided action and attention