vision: question 1 theprotects the eye a. corneab. pupilc. irisd. lens

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Vision: Question 1 The protects the eye a. Cornea b. pupil c. iris d. lens

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Vision: Question 1The protects the eyea. Cornea b. pupil c. iris d. lens

Vision: Question 2Light passes through thea. Cornea b. pupil c. iris d. lens

Vision: Question 3 Controls the amount of light into the eye (colored muscle)

a. Cornea b. pupil c. iris d. lens

Vision: Question 4The lens focuses the image onto

the

a. Cornea b. pupil c. iris d. retina

Vision: Question 5The receptor cells that pick up black and white are the

a. Rods b. conesc. retinad. optic nerve

Vision: Question 6The receptor cells that pick up color

and details are thea. Rods b. cones c. retina d.

optic nerve

Vision: Question 7The highest concentration of cones is located in the(retina’s central focus)

a. Rods b. optic nerve c. fovea d. cornea

Vision: Question 8These nerve cells in the brain respond to shapes, angles, movement

a. Foveas c. feature detectors

b. Retinas d. blind spot

Vision: Question 9This theory of vision argues that

three types of cones can make millions of combinations of colors

a. Pitch theoryb. Young-Helmholtz Trichromatic theoryc. Opponent process theoryd. Frequency theory

Vision: Question 10This theory of vision argues that

there are 3 pairs of color receptors and is best supported by afterimages

a. Pitch theoryb. Young-Helmholtz Trichromatic theoryc. Opponent process theoryd. Frequency theory

The Senses: Question 1Taking in information from the environment through the body’s senses

A. SensationB. PerceptionC. AdaptationD. Cognition

The Senses: Question 2 , also known as the ossicles,

tiny bones that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum to the inner ear

a. Cochleasb. Hammer, anvil, stirrupc. Ciliad. Auditory canals

The Senses: Question 3The snail-shaped tube in the inner ear where sound waves trigger nerve impulses is called the

a. eardrum b. cochleac. hammerd. anvil

The Senses: Question 4Damage to the hair cells or associated nerves causes

a. Conduction deafnessb. Sensorineural deafnessc. Frequency theoryd. Pitch theory

The Senses: Question 5Damage to the ossicles causes

a. Conduction deafnessb. Sensorineural deafnessc. Frequency theoryd. Pitch theory

The Senses: Question 6The fluid in the cochlea (inner ear) impacts the sense

a. Olfaction (smell)b. Gustation (taste)c. Vestibular (balance)d. Kinesthetic (body position)

The Senses: Question 7All of your sensory information

except smell passes through this “sensory switchboard” which directs it to the appropriate area of the brain to process

a. amygdalab. hippocampusC. hypothalamusd. thalamus

The Senses: Question 8The smell of food influences its taste. This is an example of

a. Sensory adaptation b. Sensory interactionc. Sensory awesomenessd. perception

The Senses: Question 9The diminished sensitivity to an

unchanged stimulus (you’ve been wearing underwear all day but don’t feel it)is called

a. Sensory adaptation b. Sensory interactionc. Sensory intensityd. perception

The Senses: Question 10Transforming stimulus energies

(sights, sounds, smells…)into neural impulses our brain can interpret is called

a. Adaptationb. Perceptionc. Transductiond. Accommodation

Perception: Question 1Our conscious awareness on one stimuli is called

a. Just noticeable differenceb. Selective attentionc. psychophysicsd. Inattentional blindness

Perception: Question 2This phenomenon describes your

ability to focus your listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conversations and background noises

a. Just noticeable differenceb. Change blindnessc. gate-control theoryd. Cocktail party effect

Perception: Question 3 is when you fail to see that your environment has changed (remember person behind counter in brain games video?)

a. Just noticeable differenceb. Inattentional blindnessc. Change blindness

Perception: Question 4 is when you fail to see visible objects when you attention is somewhere else (remember missing the gorilla in brain games video?)

a. Just noticeable differenceb. Inattentional blindnessc. Change blindness

Perception: Question 5I _ant ch_co_ate ic_ cr_am is an example of this type of processing where we use prior experiences to perceive things

a. top-down processingb. bottom-up processingc. Selective processing

Perception: Question 6Processing something we have no experience with requires us to put the puzzle pieces together

a. top-down processingb. Bottom-up processingc. Selective processing

Perception: Question 7The minimum stimulation needed to detect a sound, pressure, light, taste…50% of the time

a. Absolute thresholdb. Subliminal messagingc. Inattentional blindness

Perception: Question 8• According to this principle, The

greater the magnitude of the stimulus, the larger the differences must be to be noticed

a. Law of effectb. Weber’s lawc. Sensory adaptation

Perception: Question 9We often perceive objects as unchanging even though they do change (ex: the door opens & we still see it as the same shape). This is calleda. Visual cliffb. Perceptual constancyc. Phi phenomenon

Perception: Question 10We are often predisposed to see

one thing and not another (remember old lady & young lady in picture?) This is known as

a. Perceptual setb. Cocktail party effectc. Espd. Monocular cue

Oh My Eyes! Question 1This experiment showed that

infants have the ability of depth perception (ability to judge distance b/c we see in 3D)

a. Gestaltb. figure-groundc. Visual Cliffd. “Little Albert”

Oh My Eyes! Question 2Depth cues that depend on the use of both eyes are called

a. Monocular cuesb. Binocular cuesc. Visual cliff cuesd. Grouping cues

Oh My Eyes! Question 3The difference in the images from

the retinas in our eyes; helps us perceive depth (remember finger sausage & hole in the hand?)

a. retinopathyb. Retinal disparityc. groupingd. Monocular cues

Oh My Eyes! Question 4Each of these represents how our brains innately look at things in groups or as a WHOLE, not as isolated elements. This describes what type of psychology?

a. Gestalt psychology b. Humanist psychologyc. Perceptual psychologyd. Sensory psychology

Oh My Eyes! Questions 5What are depth cues that rely on one eye alone?

a. Perceptual cuesb. Binocular cuesc. Monocular cuesd. Retinal cues

Oh My Eyes! Question 6Which monocular cue is

represented by this image?a. Relative height

b. interpositionc. Relative size

d. Linear perspective

Oh My Eyes! Question 7Which monocular cue is

represented by this image?a. Relative height

b. interpositionc. Relative size

d. Linear perspective

Oh My Eyes! Question 8Which monocular cue is

represented by this image?a. Relative height

b. interpositionc. Relative size

d. Linear perspective

Oh My Eyes! Question 9Which monocular cue is

represented by this image?a. Relative height

b. interpositionc. Relative size

d. Linear perspectiveMan