Module 5 Flashcards

Perceptual development

1
Q

sensation vs. perception

A
  • sensation: processing of external world through receptors in sense organs
    • pattern of light hitting retina
  • perception: organizing and interpreting sensory info
    • experience of seeing
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2
Q

empiricist vs. nativists on infant perception

A
  • empiricist: infants perceive very poorly; experience vital for sense development
  • nativists: perceptual development progresses through maturation, not experience
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3
Q

acuity development

A
  • newborns don’t see well
    • 20/ 200 at birth
    • 20/100 by 8 months; 20/50 by 10 months
    • recall chick contact lenses study
  • 20/20 by age 6
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4
Q

vision development

A
  • many abilities poor at birth, but near-adult levels by 8 months
    • control eye movements
      • can’t do smooth pursuit until 4 months
        • improvements due to maturation, not experience
      • scanning abilities limited
        • focus on open corner of object, outline-wherever there is high contrast
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5
Q

color vision

A
  • not present at birth
  • young infants only sensitive to bright colors and large patches of color
  • rapid development of 3 types of foveal cones- short/blue, medium/green, long/red
    • humans are trichromatic= see color by comparing how diff cones respond to light
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6
Q

categorical perception

A
  • perceiving clusters of likeness that don’t necessarily transfer to physical likeness
    • cultures without color words, or with fewer color cords, perceive same categorical boundaries
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7
Q

nature and nurture in color perception

A
  • clearly maturation of cones important
  • however experience also matters:
    • humans born above arctic circle, especially int eh fall, less sensitive to color
    • monkeys raised with only monochromatic light (not full wavelengths) don’t categorize color the way humans/typical monkeys do (had more than 2 clusters)
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8
Q

3 types of depth cues

A
  • binocular cues: involves having 2 eyes (1 month)
  • monocular/ pictorial cues: exist in 2D pictures (4 months)
  • dynamic cues: seeing objects moving (7 months)
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9
Q

binocular cues: 2 eyes

A
  • binocular disparity: retinal image of each eye slightly different
  • our visual system fuses the two. images so we don’t see double
    • closer objects have more disparity
    • using binocular cues to see depth called stereopsis
  • convergence: eye muscles more tense when looking at closer objects
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10
Q

berkeley’s theory of development of depth perception

A
  • if you have 2 eyes, you feel convergence
  • babies reach for objects
  • babies learn to associate binocular cues with depth by building association btw amount of eye strain and length of reach over time
  • empiricist view
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11
Q

sensitive period for stereopsis?

A
  • often true in first few months; fixes itself by 2 months
  • 4% kids have it beyond this period; eventually brain suppresses input from less clear eye
  • stereopsis worse if strabismus not surgically fixed by age 2
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12
Q

strabismus/ amblyopia

A

two eyes misaligned

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13
Q

pictorial cues: in 2D images

A
  • interposition: overlapping shapes in front
  • convergence in distance: parallel lines meet at the horizon
  • texture gradients: repeating patterns get smaller when farther away
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14
Q

the ames window

A

testing pictorial depth; with one eye covered, 7 month olds reach to long side- suggests pictorial cue develops around 6 mos

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15
Q

motion parallax

A
  • relative movement of near and far objects to motion of eye
    • when you move your head left, near object move faster/ more right than far objects
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16
Q

optical expansion

A
  • retinal image of objects expand in size as they get nearer to you; the nearer of two objects expands more quickly
    • 1 month olds blink at expanding images (presumably because they see them as coming toward them)