Psyc Ch 4
Inattentional Blindness
"Blindness" caused by not attending to a stimulus Occurs when attention narrowly focused
d. biological transducers.
1. The sensory receptors of your eyes are able to convert light energy into neural energy, which can then be utilized by the brain. Thus, the sensory receptors in your eyes act as a. visual adapters. b. biological assimilators. c. phosphenes. d. biological transducers.
a. retina
10. The layer of light-sensitive pixels in the digital image sensor of a camera is analogous to the layer of photoreceptors in which area of the eye? a. retina b. iris c. lens d. pupil
a. sensation.
2. When Beverly detects the physical energies in her environment with her eyes, ears, and other sensory organs, she is engaging in the process known as a. sensation. b. perception. c. adaptation. d. cognition.
b. data reduction
3. Because our senses select, analyze, and filter information until only the most important information remains, our senses are considered __________ systems. a. convergent b. data reduction c. somesthetic d. replicating
c. sensory adaptation.
4. The decrease in sensory response to an unchanging stimulus is known as a. sensory conflict. b. sensory gating. c. sensory adaptation. d. selective attention.
c. visible spectrum.
5. The spread of electromagnetic energies to which the human eyes respond is called the a. perceptual field. b. gamma quadrant. c. visible spectrum. d. spectral composite.
d. electromagnetic radiation.
6. The visible spectrum is made up of a narrow range of wavelengths of a. spectral particles. b. ionized nanometers. c. phosphenes. d. electromagnetic radiation.
a. 400-700 nanometers
7. Visible light is made up of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths of a. 400-700 nanometers. b. 20 to 20,000 C.P.S. c. 300-800 decibels. d. 20 to 20,000 hectometers.
b. focus an image on the retina.
8. The function of the lens is to a. locate an image. b. focus an image on the retina. c. combine the location and projection on the blind spot. d. project an image on the cornea.
a. photoreceptors
9. Within one's eye, the light-sensitive cells are called a. photoreceptors. b. phosphenes. c. tympanics. d. stereocilia.
Extrasensory Perception
Ability to perceive events in ways that cannot be explained by known capacities of the sensory organs
Depth Perception
Ability to see three-dimensional space and to accurately judge distances
Perceptual Construction (similar to perceptual learning)
Actively created by the brain: largely limited to social expectations, not physical (i.e., perceiving coughing as cheating on an exam, or a white pen in one's mouth as a cigarette for the "bad boy" but not the "good boy")
Bottom-Up Processing
Analyzing information starting at the bottom (small units) and going upward to form a complete perception: some blue triangles on a green background
Brightness Constancy
Apparent brightness of an object stays the same, even under changing lighting All objects must be illuminated by the same amount of lightconditions
Blind Spot
Area of the retina lacking visual receptors (where nerves leave the eye and go on to the brain)
Vestibular
Balance, position in space, and acceleration
Parapsychology
Branch of psychology that studies ESP and other psi phenomenon
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Caused by damage to inner ear hair cells or auditory nerve Hearing aids useless; auditory messages cannot reach brain Cochlear Implant: Electronic device that stimulates auditory nerves
Organ of Corti
Center part of the cochlea containing hair cells, canals, and membranes
Perceptual Learning
Change in the brain that alters how we process sensory information
Perceptual Learning
Changes in the brain Alter how we construct sensory information into precepts Expert chess players have superior spatial recognition of chess pieces on a board but only when the pieces are placed in a strategic manner.
Accommodation
Changes in the shape of the lens by ciliary muscles
Impossible Figure
Conflicting information prevents perceptual organization Cannot be organized into stable, consistent, or meaningful perception
Anosognosia
Denial of illness. Almost exclusively left sided hemiplegia. Damage to the right prefrontal and/or parietal lobes.
Kinesthetic
Detect body positioning and body movement
Tympanic Membrane:
Eardrum
Light touch, pressure, pain, cold, warmth Specialized receptors for sensations Free nerve endings produce all five
Five different sensations:
Sense receptors
How does data reduction take place?
respond less to unchanging stimuli Respond most to changes in stimulation
In sensory adaptation, receptors
Figure-Ground Organization
Inborn part of a stimulus stands out as an object (figure) against a less prominent background (ground) -Only one figure can be seen
Flavor
Influenced by texture, temperature, smell, and pain
Perceptual habits
Ingrained patterns of organization and attention If a slammed door usually meant you were about to get yelled at by an angry parent, slammed doors decades after your parents deaths might still cause anxiety.
Photoreceptors
Light-sensitive cells in the eye (rods and cones)
Retina
Light-sensitive layer of cells at the back of the eye
Why would sensory conflict cause nausea?
Many poisons disturb the vestibular system, vision, and the body. Therefore, if you're vestibular system is disturbed, you may have ingested poison. Either way, go ahead and vomit just to be sure.
Perceptual Learning: Motives, Emotion, and Perception
Motivations can influence perceptions Emotions can influence perceptions
Contiguity
Nearness in time and space perception that one thing has caused another
Visible Spectrum
Part of the electromagnetic spectrum to which the eyes respond
Ambiguous Stimuli/Figure
Patterns allowing more than one interpretation Brain interprets same information more than one way
Perception: Gestalt Organizing Principles
Perception involves grouping sensations into an object or figure
Continuation
Perceptions tend toward simplicity and continuity
Conductive Hearing Loss
Poor transfer of sounds from tympanic membrane to inner ear Compensate with amplifier (hearing aid)
Umami
Possible fifth taste sensation; brothy taste Stimulated by monosodium glutamate (MSG)
Top-Down Processing
Preexisting knowledge that is used to rapidly organize features into a meaningful whole: the letter K (which is seen faster by people with first or last names that start with the letter K)
Precognition
Purported ability to accurately predict the future
Telepathy
Purported ability to communicate directly with someone else's mind (no evidence*)
Clairvoyance
Purported ability to perceive events in ways that appear unaffected by distance or normal physical barriers (no evidence*)
Perceptual Learning: Perceptual Expectancies
Readiness to perceive in a particular manner, induced by small expectations Lead us to see what we expect to see Created by suggestion
Hair Cells
Receptor cells within cochlea transduce vibrations into nerve impulses Once dead they are never replaced
Sound Waves
Rhythmic movement of air molecules Frequency Amplitude Rarefaction and compression
Olfaction
Sense of smell One of the chemosenses Responds to airborne molecules
Gustation
Sense of taste One of the chemosenses Responds to molecules in solids, liquids
Touch, pressure, pain, heat, cold
Skin Senses
Cochlea
Snail-shaped Organ of hearing
Sensations produced by the skin, muscles, joints, viscera, and organs of balance
Somesthetic Senses
Common Region
Stimuli that are found within a common area tend to be seen as a group
Nearness
Stimuli that are near each other tend to be grouped together
Similarity
Stimuli that are similar in size, shape, color, or form tend to be grouped together
Lens
Structure in the eye that focuses light rays
Visual Cliff Studies
Suggests depth perception is partly innate; party learned Glass table with a "shallow" and "deep side Infants will refuse to crawl over deep side Lack of coordination may explain later "crash landings"
Psychokinesis (Mind Over Matter)
Technically not classed as ESP, but often studied Purported ability to influence inanimate objects by willpower
Closure
Tendency to complete a figure so that it has a consistent overall form
Capgras Syndrome:
The belief that your mother/father (or other family member) is an exact duplicate, possibly an alien, clone, or robot. Thought to be caused by a disconnect between the amygdala and the fusiform face gyrus (resulting in no emotional reaction from seeing someone you know/love)
Shape Constancy
The perceived shape of an object remains constant, even when shape of image on retina changes
Size Constancy
The perceived size of an object remains constant, even when size of image on retina changes
Auditory Ossicles:
Three small bones that vibrate link eardrum with the cochlea
b. at least 2 hours
To do well in a university level class it is recommended* that a student study ____ for each hour that class meets per week. a. about 1 hour b. at least 2 hours c. maybe 15 minutes d. Just study a couple of hours the night before a test.
Cornea
Transparent membrane covering the front of the eye bends light rays While the cornea is involved in focusing, it is fixed (the shape of the lens can be changed)
Rods and Cones
Two types of photoreceptors located in retina
Pain control
Unpleasant emotions increase pain (if you think this class is going to be boring... you'd be wrong!)
Sensory Conflict Theory
Vestibular system sensations do not match sensations from the eyes and body
Pinna
Visible, external part of the ear
send fewer and fewer impulses to the brain
When exposed to a constant stimuli,
Hallucination
When people perceive objects or events that have no external basis in reality(that depends on your definition of "reality")
Control
_ and being fully informed reduce pain
The rainbow ruse
a crafted statement which simultaneously awards the subject with a specific personality trait, as well as the opposite of that trait.
Misoplegia
a hatred for the affected limb, or, in some cases, the belief that the affected limb belongs to someone else. Misoplegia has been found to occur when there has been damage to three areas of the brain: the right parietal lobe, right optic thalamus, and/or the right thalamoparietal radiation.
Cotard's Disorder:
a person's "delusion" that s/he is dead. May be similar to Capgras syndrome. Thought to be caused a much more widespread disconnection of all sensory input; hearing, touch, vision, everything is disconnected from the limbic structures. It's an impoverished sense of self, an alienation of self. None of the sensations of the external world have any emotional significance which may cause an existential annihilation
Incus
anvil
Sensation
any time one of your sensory cells is activated.
Positive emotions
broaden perceptual focus
Pleasant emotions
decrease pain (if you're really looking forward to that tattoo it likely won't hurt as much as if you were being punished by hundreds of needles.
Sense receptors
do not transduce all the energies they encounter -only transduce part of their target energy range
Malleus
hammer
Rods
have 100 million -Visual receptors for dim light -Black and white and movement (male advantage)
Cones
have 6.5 million -Visual receptors for bright light (daylight) Color vision and edges (female advantage)
Sane hallucinations/ Charles Bonnet Syndrome:
individuals who are partially blind, but not mentally disturbed, report seeing a variety of images, including but not limited to animals, cartoons, (the brain does not "like" missing data and tends to fill it in)
Transduction
is changing a photon or sugar or heat into an electrochemical message which moves along your nervous system towards your brain.
Chemesthesis
is defined as the chemical sensibility of the skin and mucus membranes. Chemesthetic sensations arise when chemical compounds activate receptors associated with other senses that mediate pain, touch, and thermal perception.
Piquance
is the condition of having a strong, sharp smell or taste which is often so strong that it is unpleasant.
Negative emotions
narrow perceptual focus: increases the likelihood of perceptual blindness.
Phantom Limbs
occur when a limb is amputated but still produces sensations (esp. pain)
Other-Race Effect:
people of all races (i.e., ethnicities) are better at recognizing faces of their own race than of others (and believe other races all look alike). But, when one is in a good mood, the ability to recognize people from other races improves.
Forer effect:
relies in part on the eagerness of people to fill in details and make connections between what is said and some aspect of their own lives
Brain's neuromatrix
still believes limb to be there
Stapes
stirrup
Taste Buds: Taste-receptor organs. Four Taste Sensations:
sweet, salty, sour, bitter Most sensitive to bitter, least sensitive to sweet
Perception
when sensations reach the level of meaningful patterns.