Question 1
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[blank_start]Sensation[blank_end] refers to the process by which sense organs gather information about the environment and transmit it into the brain for initial processing.
Question 2
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[blank_start]Perception[blank_end] refers to the closely related process by which the brain selects, organizes, and interprets sensations.
Question 3
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Psychophysics studies the relationship between
Question 4
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Specialized cells that all sensory systems contain are called [blank_start]sensory receptors[blank_end].
Question 5
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respond to environmental stimuli
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tell your body that danger is coming because they know what you are seeing and hearing
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typically generate action potentials in adjacent sensory neurons
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take energy from the environment and turn it into neural impulses that are sent to the brain
Question 6
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Within each sensory modality, the brain codes sensory stimulation for
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intensity
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perception
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quality
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emotion
Question 7
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The common features of the senses are that they
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must translate physical information into sensory signals
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all have thresholds below which a person does not sense anything
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require constant decision making (mostly unconscious)
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are able to detect changes in the environment
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allow the body to adapt to light various noises in the room
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tell the body to move when a car is coming
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make it easier for you to see in the dark
Question 8
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The absolute threshold refers to the maximum amount of physical energy (stimulation) needed for an observer to notice a stimulus.
Question 9
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[blank_start]Vision[blank_end] A candle flame 30 miles away on a dark, clear night.
[blank_start]Hearing[blank_end] A watch ticking 20 feed away in a quite place
[blank_start]Smell[blank_end] A drop of perfume in a six-room house
[blank_start]Taste[blank_end] A teaspoon of sugar in 2 gallons of water
[blank_start]Touch[blank_end] A wing of a fly falling on the chichi from a height of a centimeter
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Vision
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Hearing
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Smell
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Taste
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Touch
Question 10
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[blank_start]Difference threshold[blank_end] refers to the lowest level of stimulation required to sense that a change in stimulus has occurred.
Question 11
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[blank_start]Just noticeable difference[blank_end] is the smallest difference in intensity between two stimuli that a person can detect.
Question 12
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JND explained in relation to a stimulus can be shown as
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more intense existing stimulus needs a larger change
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more intense existing stimulus needs a smaller change
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less intense existing stimulus needs no change
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more intense existing stimulus needs the same amount of change
Question 13
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This law states that regardless of the magnitude of two stimuli, the second must differ by a constant proportion from the first for it to be perceived as different.
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Fechner's Law
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Weber's Law
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Steven's Power Law
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The law of perception
Question 14
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This law holds that the physical magnitude of a stimulus grows logarithmically as the subjective experience of intensity grows arithmetically... So people subjectively experience only a small percentage of actual increases in stimulus intensity.
Question 15
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This law states that subjective intensity grows as a proportion of the actual intensity raised to some power... So sensation increases in a linear fashion as actual intensity grows exponentially.
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Weber's Law
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Fechner's Law
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Steven's Power Law
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The law of adaptation
Question 16
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[blank_start]Sensory adaptation[blank_end] is the tendency of sensory systems to respond less to stimuli that continue without change.
Question 17
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An example of Weber's law is that if you are holding a 50 lb bag it only takes one pound to be perceived as different. If you are holding a 100 lb bag it only takes 2lb. So 1:50 ratio.
Question 18
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An example of Steven's power law is that if there is more pain, there is less addition intensity required for a JND.
Question 19
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An example of Fechner's law is your ears adapting at a concert or the eyes to the lighting from the sunlight to the lighting in a movie theatre.
Question 20
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The three basic principles that apply across all of the senses are:
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No one to one correspondence between physical and psychological reality
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They are active, not passive
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They are adaptive
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They are passive, not active
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They have a known correspondence between physical and psychological reality
Question 21
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The process of converting physical energy or stimulus information into neural impulses is called [blank_start]transduction[blank_end].