General Psychology, 4: Sensation and Perception Flashcards
Sensation vs. Perception
Sensation is the initial experience of a stimulus, whereas perception is a more complex representation of the world that involves combining various sensations
Transduction
The process by which various forms of physical energy in the world are translated into neural signals; accomplished by sensory receptors
Role of sensory receptors and neurons in sensation
Sensory receptors are specialized neurons that react to physical energy and emit neural impulses. Ordinary neurons cannot transmit the actual physical in the form of light, pressure waves, etc - the brain’s only representation of the world is in patterns of neural firing.
Thalamus
The ‘sensory switchboard’ which processes virtually all incoming sensory signals, it organizes them and sends them to specialized cortical areas for finer processing.
Absolute threshold
Minimum amount of physical energy required to produce a sensation. Varies from person to person and acros time within persons. Defined by the stimulus level at which a person detects the stimulus at least 50% of the time.
Difference threshold
aka ‘just noticeable difference.’ The minimum amount of change in intensity of a stimulus required for a person to notice there has been a change. The person must detect a change 50% of the time to define their threshold.
Signal Detection Theory
Method of measuring perceptions that allows a researcher to differentiate between the roles of discriminability and judgement. Notable for difference from psychophysics, which neglected the need for judgement in detecting stimuli.
Visual receptors in the eye
Rods and cones, entirely located on the retina
Retina
Rear wall of the eye, covered with visual receptors
Optic nerve
Area where signals from rods and cones exit the retina along a bundle of nerves, creating a blind spot because there are no receptors on this part of the retina.
Color blindness
Most common form is difficulty distinguishing red and green. There is also yellow/blue color blindness. It is usually genetic, resulting in a deficiency in or absence of one of the types of cones used for detecting color.
Weber’s Law
As stimuli become more intense, the difference threshold increases at a constant rate.
Accomodation (vision)
The process whereby muscles around the eye cavity change the shape of the lens to better focus. The les is flattened to focus on distant objects, and thickened to focus on nearby objects.
Dorsal vs Ventral stream
Two theoretical parallel pathways for processing visual information. Roughly, the Ventral processes the “what,” dorsal the “where”. Dorsal and ventral are general anatomical directions corresponding to the posterior and the front of the body, respectively.
Olfaction
Sense of smell. The only sense that bypasses the thalamus and is directly processed in the limbic system.