front 1 The process of detecting, converting, and transmitting information from the outside world is called ___________. | back 1 sensation |
front 2 ___________ begins with "higher"-level processing involving thoughts, previous experiences, expectations, language, and cultural background and works down to the sensory level. | back 2 top-down processing |
front 3 In testing Taylor's hearing, the examiner presents a small change in volume and asks her to respond when she notices a difference. The examiner is testing her ___________. | back 3 difference threshold |
front 4 The lowest or quietest sound people can hear is their ___________. | back 4 absolute threshold |
front 5 The conversion of stimulus energy into neural impulses is called ___________. | back 5 transduction |
front 6 In the process of ___________, we filter incoming sensations, and then analyze them before sending a neural impulse to the cortex of the brain. | back 6 sensory reduction |
front 7 Different physical stimuli are interpreted as distinct sensations because the impulses travel to different parts of the brain. This is due to: | back 7 transduction |
front 8 José can sleep through storms, his neighbor's dog barking, and the television, yet he awakens abruptly at the slightest whimper of his newborn baby. The structure that filters this information and alerts the cortex to important information is called the: | back 8 reticular formation |
front 9 Thanks to the research in ___________ we are now using dogs' gift of smell sensitivity for search and rescue, crime prevention, and chemical detection of some diseases. | back 9 psychophysics |
front 10 Kayla's hearing is being tested. The specialist uses a tone generator that produces sounds of differing pitches and intensities. Kayla is asked to listen to the sounds over earphones and to indicate the earliest point at which she can hear a tone. This establishes her: | back 10 absolute threshold. |
front 11 Research on ___________ demonstrates that some information processing occurs below our conscious awareness. | back 11 subliminal stimuli |
front 12 You visit your friend's apartment and are overwhelmed by the odor of the four cats that live there. Your friend probably doesn't notice the odor as you do because of the phenomenon of ___________. | back 12 sensory adaptation |
front 13 Katie sees an acupuncturist to help relieve chronic back pain. One reason acupuncture may help is that her relief is probably caused by the release of ___________, which inhibit(s) pain perception. | back 13 endorphins |
front 14 Sensory adaptation occurs when ___________. | back 14 a sensory system becomes less responsive to continuous stimulation |
front 15 Hiroko uses breathing and visualization techniques to help control her labor pain. Which theory helps explain the effectiveness of these techniques? | back 15 gate-control theory |
front 16 The gate-control theory of pain perception ___________. | back 16 may explain why acupuncture works |
front 17 The wavelength of light, which is the distance between the crest of one wave and the crest of the next, determines its: | back 17 hue |
front 18 The ___________ of light determines its hue, and the ___________ determines its brightness. | back 18 wave length, amptitude |
front 19 Light travels through the cornea on through the ___________ to the ___________. | back 19 iris, pupil and lens |
front 20 The receptors in the eye responsible for color vision and seeing fine detail are the ___________ the receptors in the eye responsible for dim-light vision are the ___________. | back 20 cones, rods |
front 21 The ___________ are receptor cells in the retina that detect shades of gray, are responsible for peripheral vision, and are most sensitive in dim light. | back 21 rods |
front 22 Located in the center of the retina, the ___________ is a tiny pit filled with cones that are responsible for sharp vision. | back 22 fovea |
front 23 ___________ is the process that occurs when your visual system shifts from rods to cones when a light is switched on in a dark room. | back 23 light adaption |
front 24 You walk into a dark movie theater on a bright, sunny afternoon and are momentarily blinded. Within seconds, you can see in the dark theater. This process whereby the eyes adjust to allow vision in dim light is called ___________. | back 24 dark adaption |
front 25 Peter's eye doctor has told him that he has myopia, commonly known as nearsightedness, and needs glasses. This is because of what problem? | back 25 Due to the shape of his eye, images focus in front of the retina. |
front 26 ___________, proposed by Young, is that color perception results from mixing three distinct color systems – red, green, and blue. | back 26 Trichromatic theory |
front 27 The ___________ theory of color vision states that there are three systems of color opposites (blue-yellow, red-green, and black-white). | back 27 opponent-process |
front 28 The amplitude determines the: | back 28 loudness |
front 29 ___________ theory explains how we hear higher-pitched sounds. Different high-pitched sounds bend the basilar membrane hair cells at different locations in the cochlea. | back 29 place |
front 30 The frequency of a sound wave is sensed as the ___________ of a sound. | back 30 pitch |
front 31 Rock concerts, blaring radios, and raucous pep rallies are ___________. | back 31 damaging to auditory receptors |
front 32 Smell and taste can both be adversely affected by the ___________. | back 32 common cold |
front 33 Our chemical senses are ___________. | back 33 taste and smell |
front 34 Airborne chemicals released from one individual that affect another individual's behavior are known as ___________. | back 34 pheromones |
front 35 Chemical molecules pass through the nose and come into contact with the dendrites of the olfactory receptors, initiating a neural impulse. The impulse travels along the axon directly to the ___________, where most olfactory information is processed. | back 35 olfactory bulb |
front 36 The skin senses include pressure, pain, and ___________. | back 36 temperature |
front 37 Light stimulation of both pressure and pain receptors results in the sensation of ___________. | back 37 all of the above |
front 38 A(n) ___________ is a false impression of the physical world that can be produced by actual physical distortions or by errors in the perceptual process. | back 38 illusion |
front 39 ___________ are false impressions of the environment; whereas ___________ are sensory perceptions that occur without external stimulus. | back 39 Illusions; hallucinations |
front 40 Tony just used LSD and as a result perceives that his roommate is turning into a spider-like creature. He is experiencing a: | back 40 hallucinations |
front 41 Richard has suffered damage to feature detectors in the temporal and occipital lobes. He can recognize when he is looking at a face but cannot say whose face it is. He cannot even recognize himself in the mirror. This condition is known as: | back 41 prosopagnosia |
front 42 Filtering out and attending only to important sensory messages is the definition of ___________. | back 42 selective attention |
front 43 Specialized cells in the brain that respond only to certain sensory information are known as ___________. | back 43 feature detectors |
front 44 Melissa was surprised when the three people who had been sitting together on a bench at the mall each got up separately and walked away with no gesture of "goodbye"; she had perceived them as being a group, based on the Gestalt principle of ___________. | back 44 proximity |
front 45 Which basic Gestalt principle of organization states that objects that are physically alike are perceived as grouped together? | back 45 similarity |
front 46 ___________ is the tendency for the environment to be perceived as remaining the same in spite of changes in sensory input. | back 46 Perceptual constancy |
front 47 A subject lived in a rain forest so dense that he had never seen further than about 100 yards. When the subject first saw a herd of water buffalo in the distance, he thought they were insects. As they drove toward the "insects," they seemed to "grow" into buffalo. This is an example of: | back 47 size constancy |
front 48 The tendency to see a complete figure such as a circle from an incomplete figure is: | back 48 closure |
front 49 ___________ is a binocular distance cue in which the separation of the eyes results in different images on each retina. | back 49 Retinal disparity |
front 50 ___________ refers to the fact that when an observer is moving, objects at various distances move at different speeds across the retinal field. Close objects appear to fly by quickly, farther objects seem to move more slowly, and very distant objects appear to remain stationary. | back 50 motion parallex |
front 51 ___________ is the final stage of perception. | back 51 interpretation |
front 52 The neuromuscular cue to distance caused by both eyes turning in or out to focus on an object is called ___________. | back 52 convergence |
front 53 ___________ is a binocular depth cue in which the eyes turn inward as objects move closer. The amount of strain in the eye muscles is used as a cue by the brain to interpret distance. | back 53 convergence |
front 54 The ___________ is an apparatus used by scientists to study depth perception. | back 54 visual cliff |
front 55 ___________ allows us to more accurately estimate the distance of perceived objects and thereby perceive the world in three dimensions. | back 55 depth perception |
front 56 Which of the following is NOT correct? | back 56 Larger objects are usually seen as farther away. |
front 57 A tendency to perceive in a particular manner, based on experiences and expectations, is known as ___________. | back 57 all of these |
front 58 Because of ___________, an elephant is perceived as much larger when it is standing next to a mouse than it is when it stands next to a giraffe. | back 58 frame of reference |
front 59 Belinda says that she and her twin sister communicate without speaking and have a direct line of communication with each other. If this is true, the twins have a type of ESP known as: | back 59 precognition |
front 60 When someone can perceive objects or events without any stimulation of their known sensory receptors, that person has ___________. | back 60 clairvoyance |
front 61 Which of the following is not one of the faulty forms of reasoning given for believing in ESP? | back 61 cross-culture expectation |
front 62 Paige goes to her local fortune teller regularly so she will know what to expect in the months to come. She believes in the teller's ability for ___________. | back 62 precognition |