Deck 3: Spatial Vision: From Spots to Stripes

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Question
The difference in illumination between a figure and its background is known as

A) contrast.
B) definition.
C) visual angle.
D) surround.
E) brightness.
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Question
During a foggy day, what aspect of visual acuity has been reduced?

A) Spatial frequency
B) Contrast
C) Visual angle
D) Resolution
E) Orientation
Question
Spatial frequency refers to the

A) flicker rate of a grating.
B) distance between the observer and a grating.
C) amount of contrast in a room.
D) contrast threshold.
E) number of cycles of a grating per unit of visual angle.
Question
The spatial frequency of a stimulus is measured in

A) Snellen units.
B) angles per degree.
C) cycles per second.
D) degrees per second.
E) cycles per degree.
Question
The _______ function describes how spatial frequency and contrast interact to make a grating more or less visible.

A) spatial frequency
B) contrast sensitivity
C) spatial layout
D) grating positioning
E) visual angle
Question
Visual angle is a measure of the

A) actual size of an object.
B) perceived size of an object.
C) angle between the observer and an object.
D) object's contrast divided by its spatial frequency.
E) size an object takes up on the retina.
Question
Which manipulation would cause the visual angle of a balloon to increase?

A) Moving the balloon farther away
B) Rotating the balloon
C) Inflating the balloon
D) Deflating the balloon
E) Inverting the balloon
Question
The smallest spatial detail that can be resolved at 100% contrast is known as

A) sharpness.
B) spatial frequency.
C) acuity.
D) visual angle.
E) phase.
Question
Eye doctors specify acuity in terms like "20/20," but vision scientists prefer to talk about the smallest _______ of a cycle of a grating that one can perceive.

A) sine wave
B) segment
C) visual angle
D) viewing distance
E) width
Question
If somebody has 20/100 vision, this means

A) they see at 20 feet what a person with normal vision sees at 100 feet.
B) they see at 100 feet what a person with normal vision sees at 20 feet.
C) they see only 20/100 (or 1/5th) as well as a person with normal vision.
D) only 20 out of 100 people have vision as poor as theirs.
E) only 20 out of 100 people have vision better than theirs.
Question
_______ is the smallest amount of contrast required to detect a pattern.

A) Spatial frequency
B) Visual acuity
C) Luminance threshold
D) Contrast threshold
E) Activation threshold
Question
Refer to the graph.
<strong>Refer to the graph.   What does the visible region in the graph refer to?</strong> A) Acuity B) The visibility of any object whose spatial frequencies and contrasts fall within it C) The degree to which one can see from a distance of 20 feet D) The lowest contrast one can distinguish E) The distance at which an eye chart should be readable to a normal observer <div style=padding-top: 35px> What does the "visible" region in the graph refer to?

A) Acuity
B) The visibility of any object whose spatial frequencies and contrasts fall within it
C) The degree to which one can see from a distance of 20 feet
D) The lowest contrast one can distinguish
E) The distance at which an eye chart should be readable to a normal observer
Question
Scientists study contrast sensitivity for sine wave gratings because

A) patterns of stripes with fuzzy boundaries are common in the real world.
B) the eye is especially sensitive to sine wave gratings.
C) sine wave gratings involve no shadows.
D) sine wave gratings are easy to study.
E) contrast sensitivity is easy to study.
Question
_______ is a mathematical procedure by which a signal can be separated into component sine waves at different frequencies. Combining these sine waves will reproduce the original signal.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Question
The distance required for one full cycle of a repeating waveform is its

A) phase.
B) sign.
C) amplitude.
D) wavelength.
E) angle.
Question
In a referee's uniform, the number of white and black stripes per inch could be considered its

A) phase.
B) spatial frequency.
C) amplitude.
D) wavelength.
E) angle.
Question
Refer to the figure showing the responses (right) of an ON-center retinal ganglion cell to gratings of different spatial frequencies (left).
<strong>Refer to the figure showing the responses (right) of an ON-center retinal ganglion cell to gratings of different spatial frequencies (left).   The retinal ganglion cell depicted is most responsive to which spatial frequency?</strong> A) Low frequency (top) B) Medium frequency (middle) C) High frequency (bottom) D) Both low and high frequencies (top and bottom) E) All frequencies equally (top, middle, and bottom) <div style=padding-top: 35px> The retinal ganglion cell depicted is most responsive to which spatial frequency?

A) Low frequency (top)
B) Medium frequency (middle)
C) High frequency (bottom)
D) Both low and high frequencies (top and bottom)
E) All frequencies equally (top, middle, and bottom)
Question
Each retinal ganglion cell responds not only to spots of light but also to certain

A) fields of uniform gray.
B) circles of uniform gray.
C) squares of uniform gray.
D) patterns of stripes.
E) motion directions.
Question
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   The retinal ganglion cell pictured here would respond most strongly to which of the phases of the sine wave grating?</strong> A) A B) B C) C D) D E) The ganglion cell would respond equally well to all of these. <div style=padding-top: 35px> The retinal ganglion cell pictured here would respond most strongly to which of the phases of the sine wave grating?

A) A
B) B
C) C
D) D
E) The ganglion cell would respond equally well to all of these.
Question
The axons of retinal ganglion cells synapse in the two

A) magnocellular layers.
B) parvocellular layers.
C) cortexes.
D) koniocellular layers.
E) lateral geniculate nuclei.
Question
Which neurons are found in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)?

A) Magnocellular only
B) Parvocellular only
C) Koniocellular only
D) Magnocellular and parvocellular only
E) Magnocellular, parvocellular, and koniocellular
Question
If two objects appear near each other in the world, they will also be processed by cells near each other

A) on the retina only.
B) in the LGN only.
C) in striate cortex only.
D) in the LGN and striate cortex only.
E) on the retina, in the LGN, and in the striate cortex.
Question
Topographical mapping is the

A) layout of the brain.
B) guide to the structures of the brain.
C) orderly mapping of the world in the LGN and visual cortex.
D) simultaneous mapping of two objects in the visual system.
E) mapping of gyri and sulci in the brain.
Question
The right visual field projects to the _______ half of each eye and then is analyzed by the LGN in the _______ hemisphere.

A) left; left
B) left; right
C) right; left
D) right; right
E) upper; lower
Question
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   In the figure, the right LGN contains information from the</strong> A) left visual field. B) right visual field. C) right eye. D) left eye. E) magnocellular layer. <div style=padding-top: 35px> In the figure, the right LGN contains information from the

A) left visual field.
B) right visual field.
C) right eye.
D) left eye.
E) magnocellular layer.
Question
Each of the following are different names for the same structure except

A) area V1.
B) primary visual cortex.
C) LGN.
D) striate cortex.
E) area 17.
Question
Cortical magnification is the _______ devoted to a specific region in the visual field.

A) topographical map
B) amount of cortical area
C) amount of blood
D) number of photoreceptors
E) amount of retinal area
Question
Which object would have the most neurons responding to it in striate cortex, and why?

A) An object in the periphery, because the periphery has greater cortical magnification than the fovea.
B) An object in the periphery, because the fovea has greater cortical magnification than the periphery.
C) An object in the fovea, because the periphery has greater cortical magnification than the fovea.
D) An object in the fovea, because the fovea has greater cortical magnification than the periphery.
E) An object in the periphery, because objects in the fovea are not processed by the striate cortex.
Question
If you look into somebody's eyes, which part of their face is being processed by the fewest cells in striate cortex, based on the principles of topographic mapping and cortical magnification?

A) Chin
B) Nose
C) Mouth
D) Eyebrows
E) Eyes
Question
The deleterious effect of clutter on peripheral object recognition is known as

A) clutter induced blindness.
B) lateral agnosia.
C) horizontal masking.
D) visual noise.
E) visual crowding.
Question
Suppose you are looking for your friend's face in a crowd. Due to visual clutter, it will be hardest to identify her if she is standing

A) by herself and is in your central vision.
B) between two people and is in your central vision.
C) by herself and is in your peripheral vision.
D) between two people and is in your peripheral vision.
E) between three people and is in your central vision.
Question
Hubel and Wiesel uncovered some important properties of the _______ of neurons in the striate cortex.

A) photoreceptors
B) neurotransmitters
C) axons
D) dendrites
E) receptive fields
Question
Which stimulus would a striate cortex neuron respond to most vigorously?

A) An oriented bar of light
B) A filled circle of light
C) A spot of light surrounded by a ring of darkness
D) A spot of darkness surrounded by a ring of light
E) A spot of darkness on a field of light
Question
A neuron that allows the passage of some frequencies and blocks the passage of others is a

A) selector cell.
B) ganglion cell.
C) filter.
D) bipolar cell.
E) contrast cell.
Question
Which term refers to the fact that striate cortex neurons tend to respond more strongly to stimuli presented in one eye as compared to the other?

A) Cortical magnification
B) Ocular dominance
C) Filtering
D) End stopping
E) Orientation tuning
Question
The tendency of neurons in striate cortex to respond optimally to certain orientations and less to others is known as

A) spatial frequency.
B) spatial selection.
C) orientation tuning.
D) cortical magnification.
E) orientation agnosia.
Question
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   This figure shows</strong> A) how images end up on the retina. B) the firing patterns of four cells. C) how cortical simple cells get their orientation tuning. D) how simple cells and complex cells interact. E) how magnocellular and parvocellular cells interact. <div style=padding-top: 35px> This figure shows

A) how images end up on the retina.
B) the firing patterns of four cells.
C) how cortical simple cells get their orientation tuning.
D) how simple cells and complex cells interact.
E) how magnocellular and parvocellular cells interact.
Question
A _______ cell is a neuron whose receptive field does not have clearly defined excitatory and inhibitory regions.

A) complex
B) simple
C) stop
D) ganglion
E) blob
Question
________ is the phenomenon in which a striate cortex neuron responds most strongly when a bar of light fills its receptive field rather than being either smaller than the receptive field or extending beyond it.

A) Cortical magnification
B) End stopping
C) Ocular dominance
D) Filtering
E) Orientation tuning
Question
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   What phenomenon does the figure demonstrate?</strong> A) Cortical magnification B) Ocular dominance C) Filtering D) End stopping E) Orientation tuning <div style=padding-top: 35px> What phenomenon does the figure demonstrate?

A) Cortical magnification
B) Ocular dominance
C) Filtering
D) End stopping
E) Orientation tuning
Question
Hubel and Wiesel concluded that neurons with similar orientation preferences were arranged in _______ that extended vertically through the cortex.

A) horizontal tracks
B) branches
C) rows
D) tangles
E) columns
Question
A _______ is a 1-mm block of striate cortex containing two sets of columns, each covering every possible orientation (0-180 degrees), with one set preferring input from the left eye and the other set preferring input from the right eye.

A) V1 module
B) hypercolumn
C) CO blob
D) simple cell
E) complex cell
Question
_______ is an enzyme used to reveal the regular array of CO blobs, which are spaced about 0.5 mm apart in the primary visual cortex.

A) Chromophore
B) Rhodopsin
C) Cytochrome oxidase
D) Carbon dioxide
E) Carbon monoxide
Question
Which aspect of a visual stimulus do neurons in CO blobs process?

A) Blur
B) Orientation
C) Spatial frequency
D) Motion
E) Color
Question
The diminishing response of a sense organ to a sustained stimulus is referred to as

A) constant stimulation.
B) response decrease.
C) adaptation.
D) accommodation.
E) convergence.
Question
The tilt aftereffect is the perceptual illusion of tilt, produced by

A) adapting to a pattern of a given orientation.
B) changing the direction of gaze.
C) tilting the head.
D) constantly moving the head.
E) spinning in circles for 30 seconds.
Question
No single neuron receives input from both eyes until the

A) LGN.
B) primary visual cortex.
C) parietal lobe.
D) magnocellular layer.
E) parvocellular layer.
Question
Spatial frequency channels are often referred to as

A) a set of simple cells.
B) a set of complex cells.
C) orientation tuned cells.
D) filters.
E) pattern analyzers.
Question
If a movie projector is out of focus and the images on the screen are blurry, which spatial frequencies are missing?

A) Low frequencies
B) High frequencies
C) Horizontal frequencies
D) Vertical frequencies
E) Diagonal frequencies
Question
In a line drawing of an object, which spatial frequencies are least represented?

A) Low frequencies
B) High frequencies
C) Horizontal frequencies
D) Vertical frequencies
E) Diagonal frequencies
Question
What term describes a phase in the life span during which abnormal early experience can alter normal neuronal development?

A) Impressionable era
B) Sensitive phase
C) Ontologically sensitive era
D) Critical period
E) Delicate span
Question
_______ is a developmental disorder characterized by reduced spatial vision in an otherwise healthy eye, even with proper correction for refractive error.

A) Astigmatism
B) Anisometropia
C) Strabismus
D) Amblyopia
E) Hyperopia
Question
_______ is a misalignment of the two eyes such that a single object in space is imaged on the fovea of one eye and on the nonfoveal area of the other (turned) eye.

A) Astigmatism
B) Anisometropia
C) Strabismus
D) Amblyopia
E) Hyperopia
Question
_______ is a condition in which the two eyes have different refractive errors.

A) Astigmatism
B) Anisometropia
C) Strabismus
D) Amblyopia
E) Hyperopia
Question
Which experimental technique is used to determine which stimuli infants can and cannot see?

A) Signal detection
B) Method of constant stimuli
C) Preferential looking paradigm
D) Method of adjustment
E) Method of limits
Question
If an infant looks longer at a striped square than a gray square, what does that indicate?

A) The infant's visual acuity is high enough that they can perceive the stripes, and they are attracted to low contrast images.
B) The infant's visual acuity is high enough that they can perceive the stripes, and they are attracted to high contrast images.
C) The infant's visual acuity is too low to perceive the stripes, but they do not like to look at gray squares.
D) The infant's visual acuity is high enough that they can perceive the gray square, and they are repelled by gray squares.
E) You can't learn anything about infant perception based on where they like to look.
Question
Describe two ways that visual acuity can be measured.
Question
Why do vision scientists study sine wave gratings?
Question
What is the difference between simple and complex cortical neurons in primary visual cortex?
Question
What is a "hypercolumn" in primary visual cortex?
Question
Describe the receptive field properties of retinal ganglion cells, LGN cells, and V1 cells. In what ways are they similar and in what ways are they different? How do the response properties of the cells change from retina to LGN to V1?
Question
Describe how selective adaptation works and why it is useful for studying visual perception.
Question
Describe the development of contrast sensitivity in infants and how it might be affected by developmental disorders such as amblyopia, strabismus, or anisometropia.
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Deck 3: Spatial Vision: From Spots to Stripes
1
The difference in illumination between a figure and its background is known as

A) contrast.
B) definition.
C) visual angle.
D) surround.
E) brightness.
contrast.
2
During a foggy day, what aspect of visual acuity has been reduced?

A) Spatial frequency
B) Contrast
C) Visual angle
D) Resolution
E) Orientation
Contrast
3
Spatial frequency refers to the

A) flicker rate of a grating.
B) distance between the observer and a grating.
C) amount of contrast in a room.
D) contrast threshold.
E) number of cycles of a grating per unit of visual angle.
number of cycles of a grating per unit of visual angle.
4
The spatial frequency of a stimulus is measured in

A) Snellen units.
B) angles per degree.
C) cycles per second.
D) degrees per second.
E) cycles per degree.
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k this deck
5
The _______ function describes how spatial frequency and contrast interact to make a grating more or less visible.

A) spatial frequency
B) contrast sensitivity
C) spatial layout
D) grating positioning
E) visual angle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Visual angle is a measure of the

A) actual size of an object.
B) perceived size of an object.
C) angle between the observer and an object.
D) object's contrast divided by its spatial frequency.
E) size an object takes up on the retina.
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Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
7
Which manipulation would cause the visual angle of a balloon to increase?

A) Moving the balloon farther away
B) Rotating the balloon
C) Inflating the balloon
D) Deflating the balloon
E) Inverting the balloon
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Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The smallest spatial detail that can be resolved at 100% contrast is known as

A) sharpness.
B) spatial frequency.
C) acuity.
D) visual angle.
E) phase.
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Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Eye doctors specify acuity in terms like "20/20," but vision scientists prefer to talk about the smallest _______ of a cycle of a grating that one can perceive.

A) sine wave
B) segment
C) visual angle
D) viewing distance
E) width
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Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
If somebody has 20/100 vision, this means

A) they see at 20 feet what a person with normal vision sees at 100 feet.
B) they see at 100 feet what a person with normal vision sees at 20 feet.
C) they see only 20/100 (or 1/5th) as well as a person with normal vision.
D) only 20 out of 100 people have vision as poor as theirs.
E) only 20 out of 100 people have vision better than theirs.
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11
_______ is the smallest amount of contrast required to detect a pattern.

A) Spatial frequency
B) Visual acuity
C) Luminance threshold
D) Contrast threshold
E) Activation threshold
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12
Refer to the graph.
<strong>Refer to the graph.   What does the visible region in the graph refer to?</strong> A) Acuity B) The visibility of any object whose spatial frequencies and contrasts fall within it C) The degree to which one can see from a distance of 20 feet D) The lowest contrast one can distinguish E) The distance at which an eye chart should be readable to a normal observer What does the "visible" region in the graph refer to?

A) Acuity
B) The visibility of any object whose spatial frequencies and contrasts fall within it
C) The degree to which one can see from a distance of 20 feet
D) The lowest contrast one can distinguish
E) The distance at which an eye chart should be readable to a normal observer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Scientists study contrast sensitivity for sine wave gratings because

A) patterns of stripes with fuzzy boundaries are common in the real world.
B) the eye is especially sensitive to sine wave gratings.
C) sine wave gratings involve no shadows.
D) sine wave gratings are easy to study.
E) contrast sensitivity is easy to study.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
_______ is a mathematical procedure by which a signal can be separated into component sine waves at different frequencies. Combining these sine waves will reproduce the original signal.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
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k this deck
15
The distance required for one full cycle of a repeating waveform is its

A) phase.
B) sign.
C) amplitude.
D) wavelength.
E) angle.
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k this deck
16
In a referee's uniform, the number of white and black stripes per inch could be considered its

A) phase.
B) spatial frequency.
C) amplitude.
D) wavelength.
E) angle.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Refer to the figure showing the responses (right) of an ON-center retinal ganglion cell to gratings of different spatial frequencies (left).
<strong>Refer to the figure showing the responses (right) of an ON-center retinal ganglion cell to gratings of different spatial frequencies (left).   The retinal ganglion cell depicted is most responsive to which spatial frequency?</strong> A) Low frequency (top) B) Medium frequency (middle) C) High frequency (bottom) D) Both low and high frequencies (top and bottom) E) All frequencies equally (top, middle, and bottom) The retinal ganglion cell depicted is most responsive to which spatial frequency?

A) Low frequency (top)
B) Medium frequency (middle)
C) High frequency (bottom)
D) Both low and high frequencies (top and bottom)
E) All frequencies equally (top, middle, and bottom)
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18
Each retinal ganglion cell responds not only to spots of light but also to certain

A) fields of uniform gray.
B) circles of uniform gray.
C) squares of uniform gray.
D) patterns of stripes.
E) motion directions.
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Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   The retinal ganglion cell pictured here would respond most strongly to which of the phases of the sine wave grating?</strong> A) A B) B C) C D) D E) The ganglion cell would respond equally well to all of these. The retinal ganglion cell pictured here would respond most strongly to which of the phases of the sine wave grating?

A) A
B) B
C) C
D) D
E) The ganglion cell would respond equally well to all of these.
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20
The axons of retinal ganglion cells synapse in the two

A) magnocellular layers.
B) parvocellular layers.
C) cortexes.
D) koniocellular layers.
E) lateral geniculate nuclei.
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21
Which neurons are found in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)?

A) Magnocellular only
B) Parvocellular only
C) Koniocellular only
D) Magnocellular and parvocellular only
E) Magnocellular, parvocellular, and koniocellular
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22
If two objects appear near each other in the world, they will also be processed by cells near each other

A) on the retina only.
B) in the LGN only.
C) in striate cortex only.
D) in the LGN and striate cortex only.
E) on the retina, in the LGN, and in the striate cortex.
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k this deck
23
Topographical mapping is the

A) layout of the brain.
B) guide to the structures of the brain.
C) orderly mapping of the world in the LGN and visual cortex.
D) simultaneous mapping of two objects in the visual system.
E) mapping of gyri and sulci in the brain.
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Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The right visual field projects to the _______ half of each eye and then is analyzed by the LGN in the _______ hemisphere.

A) left; left
B) left; right
C) right; left
D) right; right
E) upper; lower
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25
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   In the figure, the right LGN contains information from the</strong> A) left visual field. B) right visual field. C) right eye. D) left eye. E) magnocellular layer. In the figure, the right LGN contains information from the

A) left visual field.
B) right visual field.
C) right eye.
D) left eye.
E) magnocellular layer.
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26
Each of the following are different names for the same structure except

A) area V1.
B) primary visual cortex.
C) LGN.
D) striate cortex.
E) area 17.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Cortical magnification is the _______ devoted to a specific region in the visual field.

A) topographical map
B) amount of cortical area
C) amount of blood
D) number of photoreceptors
E) amount of retinal area
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28
Which object would have the most neurons responding to it in striate cortex, and why?

A) An object in the periphery, because the periphery has greater cortical magnification than the fovea.
B) An object in the periphery, because the fovea has greater cortical magnification than the periphery.
C) An object in the fovea, because the periphery has greater cortical magnification than the fovea.
D) An object in the fovea, because the fovea has greater cortical magnification than the periphery.
E) An object in the periphery, because objects in the fovea are not processed by the striate cortex.
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29
If you look into somebody's eyes, which part of their face is being processed by the fewest cells in striate cortex, based on the principles of topographic mapping and cortical magnification?

A) Chin
B) Nose
C) Mouth
D) Eyebrows
E) Eyes
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The deleterious effect of clutter on peripheral object recognition is known as

A) clutter induced blindness.
B) lateral agnosia.
C) horizontal masking.
D) visual noise.
E) visual crowding.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Suppose you are looking for your friend's face in a crowd. Due to visual clutter, it will be hardest to identify her if she is standing

A) by herself and is in your central vision.
B) between two people and is in your central vision.
C) by herself and is in your peripheral vision.
D) between two people and is in your peripheral vision.
E) between three people and is in your central vision.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Hubel and Wiesel uncovered some important properties of the _______ of neurons in the striate cortex.

A) photoreceptors
B) neurotransmitters
C) axons
D) dendrites
E) receptive fields
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 63 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which stimulus would a striate cortex neuron respond to most vigorously?

A) An oriented bar of light
B) A filled circle of light
C) A spot of light surrounded by a ring of darkness
D) A spot of darkness surrounded by a ring of light
E) A spot of darkness on a field of light
Unlock Deck
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34
A neuron that allows the passage of some frequencies and blocks the passage of others is a

A) selector cell.
B) ganglion cell.
C) filter.
D) bipolar cell.
E) contrast cell.
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35
Which term refers to the fact that striate cortex neurons tend to respond more strongly to stimuli presented in one eye as compared to the other?

A) Cortical magnification
B) Ocular dominance
C) Filtering
D) End stopping
E) Orientation tuning
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36
The tendency of neurons in striate cortex to respond optimally to certain orientations and less to others is known as

A) spatial frequency.
B) spatial selection.
C) orientation tuning.
D) cortical magnification.
E) orientation agnosia.
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37
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   This figure shows</strong> A) how images end up on the retina. B) the firing patterns of four cells. C) how cortical simple cells get their orientation tuning. D) how simple cells and complex cells interact. E) how magnocellular and parvocellular cells interact. This figure shows

A) how images end up on the retina.
B) the firing patterns of four cells.
C) how cortical simple cells get their orientation tuning.
D) how simple cells and complex cells interact.
E) how magnocellular and parvocellular cells interact.
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38
A _______ cell is a neuron whose receptive field does not have clearly defined excitatory and inhibitory regions.

A) complex
B) simple
C) stop
D) ganglion
E) blob
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39
________ is the phenomenon in which a striate cortex neuron responds most strongly when a bar of light fills its receptive field rather than being either smaller than the receptive field or extending beyond it.

A) Cortical magnification
B) End stopping
C) Ocular dominance
D) Filtering
E) Orientation tuning
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40
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   What phenomenon does the figure demonstrate?</strong> A) Cortical magnification B) Ocular dominance C) Filtering D) End stopping E) Orientation tuning What phenomenon does the figure demonstrate?

A) Cortical magnification
B) Ocular dominance
C) Filtering
D) End stopping
E) Orientation tuning
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41
Hubel and Wiesel concluded that neurons with similar orientation preferences were arranged in _______ that extended vertically through the cortex.

A) horizontal tracks
B) branches
C) rows
D) tangles
E) columns
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42
A _______ is a 1-mm block of striate cortex containing two sets of columns, each covering every possible orientation (0-180 degrees), with one set preferring input from the left eye and the other set preferring input from the right eye.

A) V1 module
B) hypercolumn
C) CO blob
D) simple cell
E) complex cell
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43
_______ is an enzyme used to reveal the regular array of CO blobs, which are spaced about 0.5 mm apart in the primary visual cortex.

A) Chromophore
B) Rhodopsin
C) Cytochrome oxidase
D) Carbon dioxide
E) Carbon monoxide
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44
Which aspect of a visual stimulus do neurons in CO blobs process?

A) Blur
B) Orientation
C) Spatial frequency
D) Motion
E) Color
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45
The diminishing response of a sense organ to a sustained stimulus is referred to as

A) constant stimulation.
B) response decrease.
C) adaptation.
D) accommodation.
E) convergence.
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46
The tilt aftereffect is the perceptual illusion of tilt, produced by

A) adapting to a pattern of a given orientation.
B) changing the direction of gaze.
C) tilting the head.
D) constantly moving the head.
E) spinning in circles for 30 seconds.
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47
No single neuron receives input from both eyes until the

A) LGN.
B) primary visual cortex.
C) parietal lobe.
D) magnocellular layer.
E) parvocellular layer.
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48
Spatial frequency channels are often referred to as

A) a set of simple cells.
B) a set of complex cells.
C) orientation tuned cells.
D) filters.
E) pattern analyzers.
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49
If a movie projector is out of focus and the images on the screen are blurry, which spatial frequencies are missing?

A) Low frequencies
B) High frequencies
C) Horizontal frequencies
D) Vertical frequencies
E) Diagonal frequencies
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50
In a line drawing of an object, which spatial frequencies are least represented?

A) Low frequencies
B) High frequencies
C) Horizontal frequencies
D) Vertical frequencies
E) Diagonal frequencies
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51
What term describes a phase in the life span during which abnormal early experience can alter normal neuronal development?

A) Impressionable era
B) Sensitive phase
C) Ontologically sensitive era
D) Critical period
E) Delicate span
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52
_______ is a developmental disorder characterized by reduced spatial vision in an otherwise healthy eye, even with proper correction for refractive error.

A) Astigmatism
B) Anisometropia
C) Strabismus
D) Amblyopia
E) Hyperopia
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53
_______ is a misalignment of the two eyes such that a single object in space is imaged on the fovea of one eye and on the nonfoveal area of the other (turned) eye.

A) Astigmatism
B) Anisometropia
C) Strabismus
D) Amblyopia
E) Hyperopia
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54
_______ is a condition in which the two eyes have different refractive errors.

A) Astigmatism
B) Anisometropia
C) Strabismus
D) Amblyopia
E) Hyperopia
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55
Which experimental technique is used to determine which stimuli infants can and cannot see?

A) Signal detection
B) Method of constant stimuli
C) Preferential looking paradigm
D) Method of adjustment
E) Method of limits
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56
If an infant looks longer at a striped square than a gray square, what does that indicate?

A) The infant's visual acuity is high enough that they can perceive the stripes, and they are attracted to low contrast images.
B) The infant's visual acuity is high enough that they can perceive the stripes, and they are attracted to high contrast images.
C) The infant's visual acuity is too low to perceive the stripes, but they do not like to look at gray squares.
D) The infant's visual acuity is high enough that they can perceive the gray square, and they are repelled by gray squares.
E) You can't learn anything about infant perception based on where they like to look.
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57
Describe two ways that visual acuity can be measured.
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58
Why do vision scientists study sine wave gratings?
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59
What is the difference between simple and complex cortical neurons in primary visual cortex?
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60
What is a "hypercolumn" in primary visual cortex?
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61
Describe the receptive field properties of retinal ganglion cells, LGN cells, and V1 cells. In what ways are they similar and in what ways are they different? How do the response properties of the cells change from retina to LGN to V1?
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62
Describe how selective adaptation works and why it is useful for studying visual perception.
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63
Describe the development of contrast sensitivity in infants and how it might be affected by developmental disorders such as amblyopia, strabismus, or anisometropia.
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