Deck 1: The Nature of Perception, and Some Ways of Investigating It
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Deck 1: The Nature of Perception, and Some Ways of Investigating It
1
Researchers in perception study:
A) How the brain acquires information through the senses
B) The neurological basis of handedness
C) Why some things are easier to remember than others
D) None of these
A) How the brain acquires information through the senses
B) The neurological basis of handedness
C) Why some things are easier to remember than others
D) None of these
A
2
Which of the following is a Gestalt perspective on perception?
A) Bigger is always better
B) The whole is other than the sum of the parts
C) The whole is less than the sum of the parts
D) Perception relies on past experience
A) Bigger is always better
B) The whole is other than the sum of the parts
C) The whole is less than the sum of the parts
D) Perception relies on past experience
B
3
Which statement best captures Gregory's view of perception?
A) Percepts are accurate representations of the world
B) Percepts are like scientific hypotheses
C) Percepts are like weather forecasts
D) Perception does not involve cognition
A) Percepts are accurate representations of the world
B) Percepts are like scientific hypotheses
C) Percepts are like weather forecasts
D) Perception does not involve cognition
B
4
According to Gibson, the affordance of an object is?
A) The likely cost in the effort of manipulating it
B) Its natural place in the world
C) Its implicit suggestion of how to handle it
D) Its economic value
A) The likely cost in the effort of manipulating it
B) Its natural place in the world
C) Its implicit suggestion of how to handle it
D) Its economic value
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5
Which of the following is not a level of description in Marr's theory of vision?
A) Algorithmic
B) Computational
C) Physiological
D) Implementation
A) Algorithmic
B) Computational
C) Physiological
D) Implementation
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6
A motion coherence threshold is calculated from:
A) The proportion of elements moving in the same direction at the same velocity
B) The proportion of moving elements of the same contrast
C) The element with the lowest velocity
D) The proportion of stationary elements
A) The proportion of elements moving in the same direction at the same velocity
B) The proportion of moving elements of the same contrast
C) The element with the lowest velocity
D) The proportion of stationary elements
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7
In the elderly, motion coherence thresholds are higher (motion perception is worse) than in the young:
A) At higher speeds
B) At lower speeds
C) At all speeds
D) There is no difference at any speed
A) At higher speeds
B) At lower speeds
C) At all speeds
D) There is no difference at any speed
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8
Adapting to vertical stripes:
A) Makes horizontal motion harder to see
B) Makes oblique stripes harder to see
C) Makes faint vertical stripes harder to see
D) Makes everything harder to see
A) Makes horizontal motion harder to see
B) Makes oblique stripes harder to see
C) Makes faint vertical stripes harder to see
D) Makes everything harder to see
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9
In serial visual search, reaction times:
A) Decrease with the number of elements in the display
B) Become more variable
C) Increase with the number of elements in the display
D) None of these
A) Decrease with the number of elements in the display
B) Become more variable
C) Increase with the number of elements in the display
D) None of these
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10
Perceptual learning in Vernier acuity has been studied by:
A) Change in contrast thresholds
B) Selective adaptation
C) Change in coherence thresholds
D) Transfer of training
A) Change in contrast thresholds
B) Selective adaptation
C) Change in coherence thresholds
D) Transfer of training
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11
The oblique effect is:
A) Misperception of a statement which is indirect
B) Lower sensitivity to oblique than to horizontal and vertical contours
C) Slower responses to things seen out of the corner of the eye
D) Misperception of body orientation when not upright
A) Misperception of a statement which is indirect
B) Lower sensitivity to oblique than to horizontal and vertical contours
C) Slower responses to things seen out of the corner of the eye
D) Misperception of body orientation when not upright
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12
When hearing and vision provide conflicting information about the location of objects:
A) Visual information is always followed
B) Auditory information is always followed
C) Auditory information biases perceived location when visual information is imprecise
D) None of these
A) Visual information is always followed
B) Auditory information is always followed
C) Auditory information biases perceived location when visual information is imprecise
D) None of these
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13
Which of the following brain regions is thought to be involved in synaesthesia?
A) Pre-cuneus
B) Hippocampus
C) Frontal lobes
D) Hypothalamus
A) Pre-cuneus
B) Hippocampus
C) Frontal lobes
D) Hypothalamus
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14
Measuring how changes in the apparatus affect the properties of the stimulus is known as:
A) Sensitization
B) Accommodation
C) Transduction
D) Calibration
A) Sensitization
B) Accommodation
C) Transduction
D) Calibration
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15
The highest frequency which can be detected by a human with normal hearing is about:
A) 100 Hz
B) 5 kHz
C) 20 kHz
D) 50 kHz
A) 100 Hz
B) 5 kHz
C) 20 kHz
D) 50 kHz
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16
The loudest sound which can be heard by a human without feeling pain is about:
A) 120 dB (SPL)
B) 50 dB (SPL)
C) 200 dB (SPL)
D) 80 dB (SPL)
A) 120 dB (SPL)
B) 50 dB (SPL)
C) 200 dB (SPL)
D) 80 dB (SPL)
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17
The average luminance of the sky is about:
A) 100 cd m−2
B) 1000 cd m−2
C) 4000 cd m−2
D) 400 cd m−2
A) 100 cd m−2
B) 1000 cd m−2
C) 4000 cd m−2
D) 400 cd m−2
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18
The size of visual stimuli is often expressed in:
A) Centimetres
B) Candelas per square metre
C) Foot lamberts
D) Degrees of visual angle
A) Centimetres
B) Candelas per square metre
C) Foot lamberts
D) Degrees of visual angle
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19
The elements of which an image on a digital computer screen is composed are known as:
A) Textels
B) Pixels
C) Radians
D) Verniers
A) Textels
B) Pixels
C) Radians
D) Verniers
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20
How is human vision different from the operation of a bar-code reader?
A) It transduces electromagnetic energy into electrical activity
B) It is usually accurate
C) It makes use of a large cache of stored knowledge
D) It is usually fast
A) It transduces electromagnetic energy into electrical activity
B) It is usually accurate
C) It makes use of a large cache of stored knowledge
D) It is usually fast
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21
Why is the Law of Similarity not a good explanation of perceptual grouping?
A) It is hard to understand
B) It is a re-description of the phenomena which it seeks to explain
C) There are experiments which disprove it
D) There are other perceptual laws which contradict it
A) It is hard to understand
B) It is a re-description of the phenomena which it seeks to explain
C) There are experiments which disprove it
D) There are other perceptual laws which contradict it
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22
JJ Gibson was especially interested in:
A) The perceptual control of actions
B) Visual illusions
C) Visual cognition
D) Brain mechanisms of perception
A) The perceptual control of actions
B) Visual illusions
C) Visual cognition
D) Brain mechanisms of perception
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23
Implementation (one of Marr's levels of explanation) must be different in principle in brains and digital computers because:
A) They have different energy requirements
B) One is made of metal, the other of living tissue
C) The computer is much faster than the brain
D) Neurons can be in one of many states, whereas the elements in a digital computer can be in one of only two states
A) They have different energy requirements
B) One is made of metal, the other of living tissue
C) The computer is much faster than the brain
D) Neurons can be in one of many states, whereas the elements in a digital computer can be in one of only two states
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24
An absolute threshold is:
A) A definition of a completely forbidden action
B) A measure of the faintest stimulus that can be detected
C) That part of personal space from which everyone else is excluded
D) The smallest difference between stimuli needed for reliable discrimination
A) A definition of a completely forbidden action
B) A measure of the faintest stimulus that can be detected
C) That part of personal space from which everyone else is excluded
D) The smallest difference between stimuli needed for reliable discrimination
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25
Thresholds are a measure of which aspect of a perceptual system?
A) Its sensitivity
B) Its dynamic range
C) Its adaptability
D) Its ecological importance
A) Its sensitivity
B) Its dynamic range
C) Its adaptability
D) Its ecological importance
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26
In parallel visual search, reaction times:
A) Decrease with the number of elements in the display
B) Become more variable
C) Increase with the number of elements in the display
D) Do not vary with the number of elements
A) Decrease with the number of elements in the display
B) Become more variable
C) Increase with the number of elements in the display
D) Do not vary with the number of elements
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27
Ahissar and Hochstein suggested that during the early stages of perceptual learning:
A) Learning occurred in more central cognitive processes
B) Learning occurred in specific early visual mechanisms
C) Learning was slow and tentative
D) Learning was not subject to interference
A) Learning occurred in more central cognitive processes
B) Learning occurred in specific early visual mechanisms
C) Learning was slow and tentative
D) Learning was not subject to interference
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28
Contextual or top-down effects in perception are probably mediated at least to some extent by:
A) Lateral connections in the retina and cochlea
B) Reward signals in the brain
C) Feedback from later to earlier stages of perception
D) Cerebellar activity
A) Lateral connections in the retina and cochlea
B) Reward signals in the brain
C) Feedback from later to earlier stages of perception
D) Cerebellar activity
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29
Humans can detect the range of sound frequencies from about:
A) 1 Hz to 100 Hz
B) 20 Hz to 20 kHz
C) 5 kHz to 100 kHz
D) 20 kHz to 100 kHz
A) 1 Hz to 100 Hz
B) 20 Hz to 20 kHz
C) 5 kHz to 100 kHz
D) 20 kHz to 100 kHz
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30
Compare and contrast the views on the nature of perception of RL Gregory and JJ Gibson
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31
How has motion perception changed in the elderly?
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32
How have visual search tasks affected our view of visual attention?
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33
How have experiments on perceptual learning influenced our view of plasticity in the adult brain?
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34
How would you convince a sceptic who says that synaesthesia is just a product of a vivid imagination?
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