What are sensory and perceptual processes?
The means by which people receive, select, modify, and organize stimulation from in-n-out
The means by which people receive, select, modify, and organize stimulation from the world
The means by which people modify stimulation from the world
The means by which people smell and see things
skills are coordinated movements of the muscles and skills
Habituation Assimilation Accomodation Centration( Habituation, Assimilation, Accomodation, Centration ) is when a novel stimulus is presented; babies pay more attention but gradually less attention when it becomes familiar.
Auditory threshold refers to the loudest sound that a person can hear.
What is it called when certain info, such as duration, rate, and intensity, (is amodal) in that it can be presented in different senses?
Amodal presentation
Amodal information
Amodal senses
What is intersensory redundance theory?
The infant's occipital system is particularly attuned to amodal info that's presented to one sensory mode
The infant's perceptual system is particularly attuned to amodal info that's presented to one sensory mode
The idea that Taylor Swift's favorite number is 13, which is backed by science – girl science
The infant's perceptual system is particularly attuned to amodal info that's presented to multiple sensory modes
constancy is the realization that an object's actual size remains the same despite changes in the size of its retinal image.
What is it called when on a glass-covered platform, on one side, a pattern appears directly under the glass, but on the other, it appears several feet below the glass?
Visual glass
Visual cliff
Visual platform
Taylor's 3rd album, Speak Now (TV)
The smallest pattern that can be distinguished dependably is called visual activity
In the retina of the eye, specialized neurons that detect wavelengths are called cones cornea optic nerve pupil( cones, cornea, optic nerve, pupil ).
What are kinetic cues?
A type of depth prompt that the human eye perceives when viewing two parallel lines that appear to meet at a distance
Depth cues based on motion, such as visual acuity and motion parallel
Depth cues based on motion, such as visual expansion and motion parallax
Cues that are kinetic
What are perceptual cues to depth based on the fact that, when a person views an object, the retinal images in the left and right eyes differ, called?
Visual disparity
Retinal disparity
Disparity
Tired eyes
Which is NOT an example of pictorial cues
Linear perspectives
Interposition
Texture
None of the above, they're all examples
What is linear perspective?
A type of depth prompt that a mantis shrimp eye perceives when viewing two parallel lines that appear to meet at a distance
A type of depth prompt that T Swiftie perceives when viewing her audience that appears to meet at a distance
A perspective of linear perspective
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The texture gradient radient progress disparity( gradient, radient, progress, disparity ) is the progressively finer appearance of texture and surface grains of objects as the viewer moves away from them
Which answer best defines differentiation?
Taking in info that is compatible with what one already knows
Individual motions
Distinguishing and mastering individual motions
What is perceptual processing?
The smallest pattern that can be distinguished dependably
The ability to move around in the world
Selecting, organizing, and interpreting info
Cognitive activities that require virtually no effort
Inderdispostion is a type of monocular cue in which one object partially obscures or covers another object, giving the perception that the object that is partially covered is farther away
Relative is when two objects are similar in size and we perceive the one that casts a smaller retinal image to be farther away.
What are the processes that determine which info will be processed further by an individual called?
Locomotion
1989
Attention
Perceptual processing
What is an orienting response?
An organism's immediate response to a change which is not sudden enough to elicit the startle reflex
A response which orients an orienting response
An organism's delayed response to a change that is not sudden enough to elicit the startle reflex
Locomotion is the inability ability( inability, ability ) to move around in the world
What is not an example of fine-motor skills?
Grasping
Holding
Manipulating objects
Jumping
Reaching
What is integration?
Linking individual motions into a coherent and coordinated whole
Linking individual skills into a coherent and whole
Young children are able to think about things symbolically
Dynamic systems theory hypothesis( theory, hypothesis ) is a theory that views development as involving many distinct skills that are organized and reorganized over time to meet demands of specific tasks