Perception & Sensation Flashcards
What is akinetopsia?
can’t perceive objects in motion
What is the most dominant sense, how can you tell?
visual, more brain area is dedicated to visual info
Why does ventriloquism work?
visual sense is dominant so even though we can hear that the voice is coming from person we see the puppet talking so it overides the auditory info
What is the order of things that light passes though?
light -> cornea -> lens -> retina
What are the two tpyes of photoreceptors in the retina?
rods and cones
What are some characteristics of rods?
work well in low light, lower visual acuity, colour blind, not in fovea, in periphery
What are some characteristics of cones?
don’t work in low light, higher visual acuity, colour sensitive, in fovea, not in periphey
What is the blindspot?
where optic nerve connects to retina
When does the name of the optic nerves change?
after the optic chiasm its called the optic tract, after the LGN called optic radiations
What does V1 mean
primary visual cortex in brain
What is lateral inhibition? What does it cause?
when cells are stimulated they inhibit the activity of neighboring cells
edge enhacement
What is the difference between encoding and decoding?
encoding is our brain turning sitmulus into neural signals and decodeing is our brain deciphering the neural signals to get the stimulus
What are dot detectors?
aka center surround cells, stimulus in the center of the receptive field leads to faster firing, stimulus in surrounding area of receptive field will lead to lower than baseline firing, stimulus covering entire field are same as no stimulus
What effect does stimulus that covers entire receptive field of center surround cells have?
same effect as no stimulus
What are some types of receptor specializations?
dot detectors, orientation (edge detectors), angle detectors, movement detectors, corner detectors
Why do stars appear to disappear when you look directly at them?
the light falls on the fovea which contains only cones
Where is the dorsal stream located? What is another name for it?
parietal system, where system
Where is the ventral stream located? What is another name for it?
inferotemporal cortex, what system
What is the function of where system? What could damage cause?
connects occipital lobe to posterior parietal cortex, locates the object/space
difficulty reaching for object
What is the function of what system? What could damage cause?
connect occipital lobe to inferotemporal cortex, indetifies the object
visual agnosia
What are some advantages of parallel processing?
speed and efficiency, and mutual influence among the systems