Perception Flashcards

1
Q

Opponent process theory

A
  • colour perception depends on receptors that make ANTAGONISTIC RESPONSES to three pairs of colors
  • Blue/yellow; green/red; white/black
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2
Q

Feature Detectors

A
  • neurons that respond selectively to very specific features of more complex stimuli
  • Examples: simple cells and complex cells
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3
Q

Simple cells

A
  • respond bed to lines of correct width, orientation, and location in receptive field
  • Cells will fire differently if you look at a horizontal or vertical water bottle
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4
Q

Complex cells

A
  • Respond best to movement of lines in a specific direction
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5
Q

What is the goal of visual perception?

A
  • reconstruct the dynamic 3D world around us, from a 2D image
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6
Q

Perceptual constancy

A
  • the tendency to experience a stable perception despite continually changing sensory input
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7
Q

Distal Stimuli

A
  • stimuli lie in the distance (in the world outside the body)
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8
Q

Proximal stimuli

A
  • The stimulus energies that impinge directly on the sensory receptors
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9
Q

Perceptual hypothesis

A
  • an inference about which distal stimuli could be responsible for the proximal stimuli senses
  • Shape, size, colour constancy helps determine this
  • Context matters
  • Door example: open door in door frame is distal stimuli, the SHAPE of the open door (not the frame) is what affects our sensory receptors, perception shows what object we identified to have the proximal stimulus effect on our senses (this is SUCH a broken down way of describing this oh my god)
  • THE CHT // TAE CAT example (the h/a were the same in-between looking letter but we r able to distinguish them in context
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10
Q

Depth perception

A
  • interpretation of visual cues that indicate how near or far away objects are
  • Binocular or monocular cues
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11
Q

Binocular cues

A
  • cues about distance based on differing views of the 2 eyes
  • Retinal disparity (objects project images to slightly different images in each eye)
  • Convergence (sensing eyes converge towards each other as they focus on closer objects; cross-eye)
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12
Q

Monocular depth cues

A
  • cues about the distance based on the image in either eye alone
  • 1) Motion parallax
  • 2) Pictorial depth cues
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13
Q

Motion parallax

A
  • depth cues resulting from the images of objects at different distances moving across the retina at different rates
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14
Q

Pictorial depth cues

A
  • cues about depth that can be given in a picture
  • Linear perspective (road), texture gradients, interposition (things in front of other things in a photo), relative size (bigger=closer), height plane, lights &shadow
  • There’s still optical illusions (think street chalk) and moon illusions (with light/shadows)
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