Sensation, Perception, Learning, Memory, and Language Flashcards
All our contact with the outside world depends on ____ and ____. ____ refers to the receipt of physical stimulation through special sensory organs. ____ is the process of becoming aware of, modulating, and interpreting sensory stimulation.
Sensation and Perception; Sensation; Perception
Two ____ of ____ ____ are used to explain our ability to distinguish between colors.
Theories of Color Vision
According to the Young-Helmholtz ____ ____, there are three types of color receptors (____) that are each receptive to a different primary color — ____, ____, or ____ — and all other colors are produced by variations in the activity of these three receptors.
Trichromatic Theory; Cones; Red, Blue, or Green
Hering’s ____ -____ ____ postulates three types of bipolar receptors: ____ -____, ____ -____, and ____ -____. According to this theory, some cells are excited by red and inhibited by green, and so on; and the overall ____ of ____ of these ____ produces the various colors that we ____.
Opponent-Process Theory; Red-Green, Yellow-Blue, White-Black; Pattern of Stimulation; Cells; Perceive
The ____ -____ ____ is supported by the phenomenon of ____ ____, which involves seeing an image of an object in its complementary color after staring at it for a period of time and then looking at a neutral background.
Opponent-Process Theory; Negative Afterimages
Because trichromatic theory and opponent-process theory do not adequately explain color vision, current thought embraces ____ ____: A trichromatic mechanism is used to explain the coding of color by the ____, while an opponent-process mechanism is presumed to operate in the ____.
Both Theories; Cones; Thalamus
____ ____ (color deficiency) is often the result of a genetic defect that affects one or more of the three types of cones, but it may also be caused by a disease or injury that affects the retina, optic nerve, or other component of the visual system.
Color Blindness
The inherited form of color blindness is usually caused by __ ____ on the __ ____, which means that ____ are more prone to color blindness than are ____. For a female to be color blind, she must inherit the trait from ____ ____, while a male is vulnerable when his mother is either ____ ____ or carries the ____ -____ ____.
A Gene; X Chromosome; Males; Females; Both Parents; Color Blind; Color-Blind Trait
There are several types of ____ ____. The most common type is an inability to distinguish between ____ and ____, and this type affects about 8 to 10% of the ____ ____. ____ -____ ____ ____ and complete ____ ____ are much less common.
Color Blindness; Red and Green; Male Population; Blue-Yellow Color Blindness and Complete Color Blindness
The term ____ ____ (or just achromatopsia) is used to describe an inherited form of complete color blindness that is caused by lack of functioning of the ____ ____, while the term ____ (or cerebral) ____ is used to describe complete color blindness that is caused by a ____ in ____, which is usually in the ____ ____.
Congenital Achromatopsia; Cone Cells; Central Achromatopsia; Lesion in Brain; Occipitotemporal Region
retinal (binocular) disparity and are responsible for ____ ____ of objects at relatively close distances. ____ refers to the turning inward of the eyes as an object gets closer and vice versa. ____ ____ refers to the fact that our two eyes see objects in the world from two different views, and, the closer an object, the greater the disparity of the two images.
Depth Perception; Binocular and Monocular Cues; Binocular Cues; Depth Perception; Convergence; Retinal Disparity
____ ____ contribute to depth perception for objects at greater distances. They include the relative ____ of ____. the ____ (overlap) of objects, ____ and ____ ____, and ____ ____ (the relative movement of objects at different distances when the perceiver changes position).
Monocular Cues; Size of Objects; Interposition; Linear and Atmospheric Perspective, and Motion Parallax
____ is a chemical sense that begins with a response to airborne molecules by the olfactory receptors in the nasal cavity. These receptors send signals through the ____ ____ to the ____ ____, which acts as a relay station for ____ ____ (as the thalamus does for all other sensory information). The ____ ____ then forwards signals to several areas of the brain including the primary ____ ____, the ____ ____, and the ____.
Olfaction; Olfactory Nerve; Olfactory Bulb; Olfactory Information; Olfactory Blub; Olfactory Cortex, the Orbitofrontal Cortex, and the Amygdala
The ____ ____ ____ processes and integrates olfactory signals; the ____ ____ is believed to be involved in the conscious perception of odors; and the ____ plays an important role in olfactory memory.
Primary Olfactory Cortex; Orbitofrontal Cortex; Amygdala
The ____ ____ include pressure (touch), warmth, cold, and pain.
Cutaneous Senses
____: Axons that carry information from cutaneous receptors gather in nerves that enter the ____ ____ through the ____ ____. The area of the body that is innervated by the dorsal root of a given segment of the spinal cord is referred to as a ____.
Dermatomes; Spinal Cord; Dorsal Roots; Dermatome
The ring and little fingers represent one dermatome and are innervated by the eighth cervical nerve (C8), the forearm represents another dermatome and is innervated by the first thoracic nerve (T l), and the trunk encompasses several dermatomes that are innervated by the second through the 12th thoracic nerves (T2 through T 12). Adjacent dermatomes ____ so that damage to a nerve usually causes ____ ____ rather than a complete ____ of sensation in the corresponding dermatome.
Overlap; Diminished Sensation; Loss
Unlike other senses, ____ is not linked with a single type of stimulus but is elicited by several kinds of stimuli including pressure. heat. and cold. In addition, pain is not only a function of ____ ____ but may be affected by other phenomena: For example, the ____ of ____ can be intensified by ____ or ____ and reduced by ____, ____ ____, and ____.
Pain; Local Sensation; Perception of Pain; Depression or Anxiety; Distractions, Deep Relaxation, and Hypnosis
Pain perception is also affected by ____. Baker and Green (2005) found that older adults (ages 50+) with chronic pain not only reported lower ____ ____ than did younger adults but also ____ ____ of ____ and fewer problems ____ with their ____.
Age; Lower Pain Intensity; Fewer Symptoms of Depression; Coping; Pain
Pain is very susceptible to ____; and, for many people, just the expectation that a drug or other treatment will stop pain is sufficient to ensure that it does so.
Placebos
According to the ____ -____ ____ of ____, the nervous system can process only a limited amount of sensory information at any one time. When too much information is being received, cells in the spinal cord act as a gate that ____ some incoming ____ ____. Phenomena that can close the gate include ____ the ____ ____, applying ____ or ____, and engaging in ____ ____ ____.
Gate-Control Theory of Pain; Gate; Blocks; Pain Signals; Massaging the Injured Area; Heat or Cold; Distracting Mental Activities
____ ____: Researchers interested in identifying effective methods for coping with chronic pain distinguish between ____ and ____ ____. ____ ____ ____ include exercise, physical therapy, using distractions, and ignoring the pain. ____ ____ ____ include restricting social activities, resting in bed, taking medications to obtain immediate relief, and “wishful thinking.”
Coping Strategies; Active and Passive Strategies; Active Coping Strategies; Passive Coping Strategies
Although the results of studies comparing these active and passive strategies are not entirely consistent, they generally confirm that active strategies are associated with ____ ____ of ____ ____ and greater ____ in ____ and ____ ____.
Lower Levels of Reported Pain; Improvement in Psychological and Physical Functioning
____ (“joining senses”) is a rare condition in which the stimulation of one sensory modality triggers a sensation in another sensory modality. For example, a person with synesthesia might ____ a ____ or ____ a ____.
Synesthesia; Hear a Color or Tast a Shape
Although the cause of synesthesia is unknown, it is believed to be ____ and due to ____ ____. Cytowic (1993) attributes the phenomenon to the ____ ____; others trace it to “____ -____ or excessive ____ ____ in the ____ ____ of the ____.
Involuntary; Biological Factors; Limbic System; Cross-Wiring; Neural Connections; Sensory Regions; Brain
____ is the study of the relationship between physical stimulus magnitudes and their corresponding psychological sensations. Several ____ ____ have been developed to identify absolute thresholds and difference thresholds: An ____ ____ is the minimum stimulus needed to produce a sensation, while a ____ ____ is the smallest increment in stimulus intensity needed to recognize the discrepancy between two stimuli.
Psychophysics; Psychophysical Laws; Absolute Threshold; Difference Threshold
The difference threshold is also referred to as the ____ ____ ____ (JND) and that JNDs represent psychologically equal intervals while their corresponding physical differences do not. For example, the JND for a 15 pound weight might be an additional 1 pound. while the JND for a 50 pound weight might be 5 pounds. In these two situations, the JND is equal to one but the physical differences in weight are not equal.
Just Noticeable Difference
____ ____: According to ____ ____, the more intense the stimulus, the greater the increase in stimulus intensity required for the increase to produce a just noticeable difference. It predicts. for instance, that, if one gram must be added to ten grams for an increase in weight to be detected, then ten would have to be added to 100 grams for an increase to be perceived.
Weber’s Law; Weber’s Law
____ ____: By extending Weber’s Law, Fechner claimed to be able to determine the precise relationship between the magnitude of a stimulus and the magnitude of the associated sensation. ____ ____ states that physical stimulus changes are logarithmically related to their psychological sensations. In other words, a person’s experience of stimulus intensity increases ____ as the stimulus intensity increases ____.
Fechner’s Law; Fechner’s Law; Arithmetically; Geometrically
____ ____ ____: Weber’s and Fechner’s Laws work well for stimulus intensities within the middle range but not for ____ ____. To overcome the inadequacy of these laws, Stevens developed a direct measure of sensation. His method of magnitude estimation involves asking a participant to assign numbers to stimuli proportional to their relative sensations.
Stevens’s Power Law; Extreme Intensities