Question 1
Question
What are sensory and perceptual processes?
Answer
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The means by which people receive, select, modify, and organize stimulation from in-n-out
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The means by which people receive, select, modify, and organize stimulation from the world
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The means by which people modify stimulation from the world
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The means by which people smell and see things
Question 2
Question
[blank_start]Motor[blank_end] skills are coordinated movements of the muscles and skills
Question 3
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[blank_start]Habituation[blank_end] is when a novel stimulus is presented; babies pay more attention but gradually less attention when it becomes familiar.
Answer
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Habituation
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Assimilation
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Accomodation
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Centration
Question 4
Question
Auditory threshold refers to the loudest sound that a person can hear.
Question 5
Question
What is it called when certain info, such as duration, rate, and intensity, (is amodal) in that it can be presented in different senses?
Answer
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Amodal presentation
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Amodal information
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Amodal senses
Question 6
Question
What is intersensory redundance theory?
Answer
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The infant's occipital system is particularly attuned to amodal info that's presented to one sensory mode
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The infant's perceptual system is particularly attuned to amodal info that's presented to one sensory mode
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The idea that Taylor Swift's favorite number is 13, which is backed by science – girl science
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The infant's perceptual system is particularly attuned to amodal info that's presented to multiple sensory modes
Question 7
Question
[blank_start]Size[blank_end] constancy is the realization that an object's actual size remains the same despite changes in the size of its retinal image.
Question 8
Question
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?
Question 9
Question
The smallest pattern that can be distinguished dependably is called visual activity
Question 10
Question
In the retina of the eye, specialized neurons that detect wavelengths are called [blank_start]cones[blank_end].
Answer
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cones
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cornea
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optic nerve
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pupil
Question 11
Question
What are kinetic cues?
Answer
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A type of depth prompt that the human eye perceives when viewing two parallel lines that appear to meet at a distance
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Depth cues based on motion, such as visual acuity and motion parallel
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Depth cues based on motion, such as visual expansion and motion parallax
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Cues that are kinetic
Question 12
Question
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?
Answer
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Visual disparity
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Retinal disparity
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Disparity
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Tired eyes
Question 13
Question
Which is NOT an example of pictorial cues
Question 14
Question
What is linear perspective?
Answer
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A type of depth prompt that the human eye perceives when viewing two parallel lines that appear to meet at a distance
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A type of depth prompt that a mantis shrimp eye perceives when viewing two parallel lines that appear to meet at a distance
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A type of depth prompt that T Swiftie perceives when viewing her audience that appears to meet at a distance
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A perspective of linear perspective
Question 15
Question
Check in: how are you feeling?
Question 16
Question
The texture [blank_start]gradient[blank_end] is the progressively finer appearance of texture and surface grains of objects as the viewer moves away from them
Answer
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gradient
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radient
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progress
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disparity
Question 17
Question
Which answer best defines differentiation?
Question 18
Question
What is perceptual processing?
Answer
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The smallest pattern that can be distinguished dependably
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The ability to move around in the world
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Selecting, organizing, and interpreting info
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Cognitive activities that require virtually no effort
Question 19
Question
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
Question 20
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Relative [blank_start]size[blank_end] is when two objects are similar in size and we perceive the one that casts a smaller retinal image to be farther away.
Question 21
Question
What are the processes that determine which info will be processed further by an individual called?
Answer
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Locomotion
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1989
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Attention
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Perceptual processing
Question 22
Question
What is an orienting response?
Answer
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An organism's immediate response to a change which is not sudden enough to elicit the startle reflex
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A response which orients an orienting response
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An organism's delayed response to a change that is not sudden enough to elicit the startle reflex
Question 23
Question
Locomotion is the [blank_start]ability[blank_end] to move around in the world
Question 24
Question
What is not an example of fine-motor skills?
Answer
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Grasping
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Holding
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Manipulating objects
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Jumping
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Reaching
Question 25
Question
What is integration?
Answer
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Linking individual motions into a coherent and coordinated whole
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Linking individual skills into a coherent and whole
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Young children are able to think about things symbolically
Question 26
Question
Dynamic systems [blank_start]theory[blank_end] is a theory that views development as involving many distinct skills that are organized and reorganized over time to meet demands of specific tasks