Deck 1: Introduction

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Question
_______ is the ability to detect a stimulus and, perhaps, to turn that detection into a private experience.

A) Learning
B) Discrimination
C) Sensation
D) Perception
E) Cognition
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Question
_______ is the act of giving meaning to a detected sensation.

A) Judgment
B) Discrimination
C) Learning
D) Perception
E) Cognition
Question
Chemicals wafting through the air that activate olfactory neurons in your nose is _______, whereas interpreting the response of the olfactory neurons as smelling like apple pie is _______.

A) perception; sensation
B) sensation; perception
C) detection; judgment
D) judgment; detection
E) registration; designation
Question
_______ is a term from philosophy that refers to one's private conscious experiences of sensation or perception.

A) Qualia
B) Thoughts
C) Perceptions
D) Sensations
E) Thresholds
Question
If you wonder whether your private conscious experience of the color blue is the same as your friend's private conscious experience of blue, you are thinking about

A) sensation.
B) perception.
C) detection.
D) thresholds.
E) qualia.
Question
Which approach to studying sensation and perception would be concerned with determining the dimmest light you could perceive or the loudest sound you could hear without pain?

A) Thresholds
B) Scaling
C) Signal detection theory
D) Sensory neuroimaging
E) Computational models
Question
Which approach to studying sensation and perception would be concerned with understanding how people make extremely difficult perceptual

A) Thresholds
B) Scaling
C) Signal detection theory
D) Sensory neuroimaging
E) Computational models
Question
Which approach to studying sensation and perception would be concerned with creating a computer program that simulates perceptual processes?

A) Thresholds
B) Scaling
C) Signal detection theory
D) Sensory neuroimaging
E) Computational models
Question
Dualism is the idea that

A) the mind has an existence separate from the body.
B) two sensations can co-occur simultaneously.
C) one sensation often follows another.
D) the body can be divided into two parts.
E) All the above
Question
If one believes that human consciousness resides in a spirit, soul, or ghost that is separate than the physical body, that is the philosophical position called

A) materialism.
B) dualism.
C) panpsychism.
D) psychophysics.
E) qualia.
Question
Materialism is the notion that

A) all materials influence the mind.
B) happiness results from acquisition of material possessions.
C) materials are important to functioning.
D) materials help the mind.
E) physical matter is the only reality.
Question
The idea that all matter has consciousness is known as

A) psychophysics.
B) empiricism.
C) panpsychism.
D) mentalism.
E) nativism.
Question
_______ was the founder of psychophysics.

A) Berkeley
B) Fechner
C) Weber
D) Plato
E) Wundt
Question
_______ is the science of defining quantitative relationships between physical and psychological events.

A) Materialism
B) Dualism
C) Fourier analysis
D) Signal detection theory
E) Psychophysics
Question
_______ is the smallest distance at which two stimuli are just perceptible as separate.

A) One millimeter
B) One centimeter
C) The qualia span
D) The two-point touch threshold
E) The Fechner threshold
Question
The smallest detectable difference between two stimuli is called the

A) just noticeable difference.
B) sensitivity.
C) two-point touch threshold.
D) amplitude.
E) phase.
Question
If a participant were holding two different weights in their hands and could tell the difference between 80- and 82-gram weights, but not between 80- and 81-gram weights, then the JND would be _______ gram(s).

A) 1
B) 2
C) 80
D) 81
E) 82
Question
JND is the

A) smallest detectable difference between two stimuli.
B) difference in detection time for two different stimuli.
C) true difference in detection time.
D) time it takes to notice a stimulus.
E) judgment of no detection.
Question
_______ describes the relationship between a stimulus and its resulting sensation by proposing that the JND is a constant fraction of the stimulus intensity.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Question
Weber proposed that the smallest change in a stimulus that can be detected is a(n) _______ proportion of the stimulus level.

A) ever-changing
B) constant
C) opposite
D) small
E) one-fifth
Question
If a participant were holding two different weights in their hands and the JND for a 10-gram weight was 1 gram, what should the JND be for a 100-gram weight, according to Weber's law?

A) 1 gram
B) 2 grams
C) 10 grams
D) 20 grams
E) 100 grams
Question
Stevens' power law describes the relationship between a _______ and a(n) _______.

A) signal; noise
B) stimulus; sensation
C) sensation; perception
D) signal; receiver
E) receiver; operator
Question
_______ is the principle that describes the relationship between a stimulus and its resulting sensation that says the magnitude of subjective sensation is proportional to the stimulus magnitude, raised to an exponent.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Question
_______ describes the relationship between a stimulus and its resulting sensation by proposing that the magnitude of the resulting sensation increases proportionally to the logarithm of the stimulus intensity.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Question
Refer to the graph.
<strong>Refer to the graph.   This graph illustrates</strong> A) Weber's law. B) Berkeley's function. C) Descartes' beliefs. D) Fechner's law. E) Helmholtz's curve. <div style=padding-top: 35px> This graph illustrates

A) Weber's law.
B) Berkeley's function.
C) Descartes' beliefs.
D) Fechner's law.
E) Helmholtz's curve.
Question
Absolute threshold is the minimum amount of stimulation necessary for a person to detect a stimulus _______% of the time.

A) 30
B) 100
C) 50
D) 80
E) 99
Question
If we measure the minimum volume it would take for you to hear a tone, then we have determined your _______ for hearing.

A) absolute threshold
B) just noticeable difference
C) relative threshold
D) qualia
E) Weber fraction
Question
The method of _______ requires the random presentation of many stimuli, ranging from rarely to almost always perceivable, one at a time.

A) limits
B) constant stimuli
C) adjustment
D) sensation and perception
E) matching
Question
Imagine you are tasting bowls of soup for a chef who is working on a soup recipe, and she wants the soup to have a subtle hint of black pepper flavor. In her first batch of soup, you could not detect any pepper flavor. If she cooks several more batches of soup and keeps increasing the amount of black pepper in every batch until you finally notice the black pepper flavor, which psychophysical method is she employing?

A) Method of limits
B) Method of constant stimuli
C) Method of adjustment
D) Method of sensory tuning
E) Cross modality matching
Question
The method of _______ requires the experimenter to vary a perceptible stimulus until it is no longer perceived, or an imperceptible stimulus until it is finally perceived.

A) adjustment
B) constant stimuli
C) limits
D) matching
E) sensation and perception
Question
The method of _______ requires the observer to alter the strength of a stimulus until it matches some criterion.

A) adjustment
B) constant stimuli
C) limits
D) matching
E) sensation and perception
Question
When setting up a new monitor or video game, there is often a step in which you change the brightness of the screen until a logo is just barely visible. This is an example of

A) the method of limits.
B) the method of constant stimuli.
C) the method of adjustment.
D) the method of sensory tuning.
E) cross-modality matching.
Question
_______ is a psychophysical method in which the participant assigns values according to perceived magnitudes of the stimuli.

A) The method of limits
B) The method of constant stimuli
C) The method of adjustment
D) Magnitude estimation
E) Cross-modality matching
Question
If you are asked to taste a lemon and then adjust a light until it is as bright as the lemon is sour, you have been asked to engage in

A) magnitude estimation.
B) the method of constant stimuli.
C) the method of limits.
D) signal detection.
E) cross-modality matching.
Question
Signal detection theory consists of

A) detectors.
B) receivers.
C) transducers.
D) signal and noise.
E) thresholds.
Question
Finding a tumor in an x-ray can be thought of as searching for a(n) _______ amidst _______.

A) signal; noise
B) noise; signal
C) sensation; perceptions
D) perception; sensations
E) absolute threshold; just noticeable differences
Question
This concept refers to the observer's willingness to say they detected a signal.

A) Just noticeable difference
B) Sensitivity
C) Criterion
D) Two-point threshold
E) Perception
Question
In signal detection theory, the _______ is an internal threshold that is set by the observer.

A) criterion
B) shift
C) sensitivity
D) method of limits
E) method of adjustment
Question
In signal detection theory, the _______ is a value that defines the ease with which an observer can tell the difference between the presence and absence of a stimulus, or the difference between stimulus 1 and stimulus 2.

A) criterion
B) shift
C) sensitivity
D) method of limits
E) method of adjustment
Question
If a stimulus is present and the observer reports it as present, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
Question
If a stimulus is present and the observer reports it as absent, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
Question
If a stimulus is absent but the observer reports it as present, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
Question
If a stimulus is absent and the observer reports it as absent, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
Question
The criminal justice system in United States is designed to be biased such that it would rather let a guilty person go free than convict an innocent person. In terms of signal detection theory, the courts would rather have a _______ than a _______.

A) hit; miss
B) miss; correct rejection
C) correct rejection; miss
D) false alarm; miss
E) miss; false alarm
Question
Airport security is very tight. If a traveler even jokes about a bomb, they are detained and questioned to ensure that no real terrorist threat succeeds. In terms of signal detection theory, airport security would rather have a _______ than a _______.

A) hit; miss
B) miss; correct rejection
C) correct rejection; miss
D) false alarm; miss
E) miss; false alarm
Question
Refer to the graph.
<strong>Refer to the graph.   The curves in the graph are known as</strong> A) stimuli ratios. B) ROC curves. C) JNDs. D) signal curves. E) power curves. <div style=padding-top: 35px> The curves in the graph are known as

A) stimuli ratios.
B) ROC curves.
C) JNDs.
D) signal curves.
E) power curves.
Question
The doctrine of specific nerve energies involves the stimulation of

A) sensory fibers.
B) sensations.
C) nerve endings.
D) signals.
E) All the above
Question
If you are in a completely dark room and accidentally hit your head, you might see "stars." Even though there was only mechanical stimulation to your eyes and no light, you still had an experience of light. This fact is predicted by

A) dark adaptation.
B) the equal stimulation principle.
C) the doctrine of specific nerve energies.
D) the Müller principle.
E) Stevens' power law.
Question
The twelve pairs of nerves that originate in the brain stem and reach sense organs and muscles through openings in the skull are called the

A) Müller mileau.
B) specific nerves.
C) nervy dozen.
D) cranial nerves.
E) cranial tracts.
Question
If you had a stroke that damaged your frontal lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
Question
If you had a stroke that damaged your temporal lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
Question
If you had a stroke that damaged your occipital lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
Question
If you had a stroke that damaged your parietal lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
Question
_______ invented the ophthalmoscope, studied hearing, and first determined the speed of neural impulses.

A) Weber
B) Fechner
C) Locke
D) Ramón y Cajal
E) Helmholtz
Question
If you look at neurons through a microscope and draw detailed pictures of their structures, whose scientific career are you most likely emulating?

A) Weber
B) Fechner
C) Locke
D) Ramón y Cajal
E) Helmholtz
Question
A synapse is the junction between _______ that permits information transfer.

A) stimuli
B) sensory fibers
C) neurons
D) signals
E) the spinal cord and brain
Question
The chemical substance used in neuronal communication at synapses is known as

A) axon.
B) receptor.
C) transducer.
D) lymph.
E) neurotransmitter.
Question
Which of the following is a method or set of methods that generates images of the structure and/or function of the brain in living, behaving humans?

A) X-rays
B) Neuroimaging
C) Mindscaping
D) Cognitive mapping
E) Free association
Question
_______ imaging technology defines locations in the brain where neurons are especially active using safe radioactive isotopes to measure the metabolism of brain cells.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
Question
_______ is a technique that, using multiple electrodes on the scalp, measures changes in electrical activity across populations of many neurons in the brain.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
Question
_______ is an imaging technology that uses the responses of atoms to strong magnetic fields to form images of structures, like the brain.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
Question
_______ is a technique that measures changes in magnetic activity across populations of many neurons in the brain.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
Question
_______ makes it possible to measure localized patterns of activity in the brain by tracing changing levels of blood oxygenation.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
Question
Which computational modeling approach can help scientists better understand how sensory systems develop based on experience?

A) Efficient coding methods
B) Bayesian models
C) Artificial neural networks
D) Predictive coding
E) Mathematical models
Question
Which mathematical modeling technique is designed to discover the predictability and structure of inputs to the model?

A) Efficient coding models
B) Bayesian models
C) Stevens' power law
D) Weber's law
E) Deep neural networks
Question
Which mathematical modeling technique excels at classifying stimuli such as images or sounds into categories?

A) Efficient coding models
B) Bayesian models
C) Stevens' power law
D) Weber's law
E) Deep neural networks
Question
What is the difference between sensitivity and criterion in signal detection theory?
Question
What is the doctrine of specific nerve energies?
Question
Describe the following psychophysical methods: method of constant stimuli, method of limits, and method of adjustment.
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Deck 1: Introduction
1
_______ is the ability to detect a stimulus and, perhaps, to turn that detection into a private experience.

A) Learning
B) Discrimination
C) Sensation
D) Perception
E) Cognition
Sensation
2
_______ is the act of giving meaning to a detected sensation.

A) Judgment
B) Discrimination
C) Learning
D) Perception
E) Cognition
Perception
3
Chemicals wafting through the air that activate olfactory neurons in your nose is _______, whereas interpreting the response of the olfactory neurons as smelling like apple pie is _______.

A) perception; sensation
B) sensation; perception
C) detection; judgment
D) judgment; detection
E) registration; designation
sensation; perception
4
_______ is a term from philosophy that refers to one's private conscious experiences of sensation or perception.

A) Qualia
B) Thoughts
C) Perceptions
D) Sensations
E) Thresholds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
If you wonder whether your private conscious experience of the color blue is the same as your friend's private conscious experience of blue, you are thinking about

A) sensation.
B) perception.
C) detection.
D) thresholds.
E) qualia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which approach to studying sensation and perception would be concerned with determining the dimmest light you could perceive or the loudest sound you could hear without pain?

A) Thresholds
B) Scaling
C) Signal detection theory
D) Sensory neuroimaging
E) Computational models
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which approach to studying sensation and perception would be concerned with understanding how people make extremely difficult perceptual

A) Thresholds
B) Scaling
C) Signal detection theory
D) Sensory neuroimaging
E) Computational models
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which approach to studying sensation and perception would be concerned with creating a computer program that simulates perceptual processes?

A) Thresholds
B) Scaling
C) Signal detection theory
D) Sensory neuroimaging
E) Computational models
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Dualism is the idea that

A) the mind has an existence separate from the body.
B) two sensations can co-occur simultaneously.
C) one sensation often follows another.
D) the body can be divided into two parts.
E) All the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
If one believes that human consciousness resides in a spirit, soul, or ghost that is separate than the physical body, that is the philosophical position called

A) materialism.
B) dualism.
C) panpsychism.
D) psychophysics.
E) qualia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Materialism is the notion that

A) all materials influence the mind.
B) happiness results from acquisition of material possessions.
C) materials are important to functioning.
D) materials help the mind.
E) physical matter is the only reality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The idea that all matter has consciousness is known as

A) psychophysics.
B) empiricism.
C) panpsychism.
D) mentalism.
E) nativism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
_______ was the founder of psychophysics.

A) Berkeley
B) Fechner
C) Weber
D) Plato
E) Wundt
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
_______ is the science of defining quantitative relationships between physical and psychological events.

A) Materialism
B) Dualism
C) Fourier analysis
D) Signal detection theory
E) Psychophysics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
_______ is the smallest distance at which two stimuli are just perceptible as separate.

A) One millimeter
B) One centimeter
C) The qualia span
D) The two-point touch threshold
E) The Fechner threshold
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The smallest detectable difference between two stimuli is called the

A) just noticeable difference.
B) sensitivity.
C) two-point touch threshold.
D) amplitude.
E) phase.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
If a participant were holding two different weights in their hands and could tell the difference between 80- and 82-gram weights, but not between 80- and 81-gram weights, then the JND would be _______ gram(s).

A) 1
B) 2
C) 80
D) 81
E) 82
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
JND is the

A) smallest detectable difference between two stimuli.
B) difference in detection time for two different stimuli.
C) true difference in detection time.
D) time it takes to notice a stimulus.
E) judgment of no detection.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
_______ describes the relationship between a stimulus and its resulting sensation by proposing that the JND is a constant fraction of the stimulus intensity.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Weber proposed that the smallest change in a stimulus that can be detected is a(n) _______ proportion of the stimulus level.

A) ever-changing
B) constant
C) opposite
D) small
E) one-fifth
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
If a participant were holding two different weights in their hands and the JND for a 10-gram weight was 1 gram, what should the JND be for a 100-gram weight, according to Weber's law?

A) 1 gram
B) 2 grams
C) 10 grams
D) 20 grams
E) 100 grams
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Stevens' power law describes the relationship between a _______ and a(n) _______.

A) signal; noise
B) stimulus; sensation
C) sensation; perception
D) signal; receiver
E) receiver; operator
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
_______ is the principle that describes the relationship between a stimulus and its resulting sensation that says the magnitude of subjective sensation is proportional to the stimulus magnitude, raised to an exponent.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
_______ describes the relationship between a stimulus and its resulting sensation by proposing that the magnitude of the resulting sensation increases proportionally to the logarithm of the stimulus intensity.

A) Fourier analysis
B) Signal detection theory
C) Weber's law
D) Fechner's law
E) Stevens' power law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Refer to the graph.
<strong>Refer to the graph.   This graph illustrates</strong> A) Weber's law. B) Berkeley's function. C) Descartes' beliefs. D) Fechner's law. E) Helmholtz's curve. This graph illustrates

A) Weber's law.
B) Berkeley's function.
C) Descartes' beliefs.
D) Fechner's law.
E) Helmholtz's curve.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Absolute threshold is the minimum amount of stimulation necessary for a person to detect a stimulus _______% of the time.

A) 30
B) 100
C) 50
D) 80
E) 99
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
If we measure the minimum volume it would take for you to hear a tone, then we have determined your _______ for hearing.

A) absolute threshold
B) just noticeable difference
C) relative threshold
D) qualia
E) Weber fraction
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The method of _______ requires the random presentation of many stimuli, ranging from rarely to almost always perceivable, one at a time.

A) limits
B) constant stimuli
C) adjustment
D) sensation and perception
E) matching
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Imagine you are tasting bowls of soup for a chef who is working on a soup recipe, and she wants the soup to have a subtle hint of black pepper flavor. In her first batch of soup, you could not detect any pepper flavor. If she cooks several more batches of soup and keeps increasing the amount of black pepper in every batch until you finally notice the black pepper flavor, which psychophysical method is she employing?

A) Method of limits
B) Method of constant stimuli
C) Method of adjustment
D) Method of sensory tuning
E) Cross modality matching
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The method of _______ requires the experimenter to vary a perceptible stimulus until it is no longer perceived, or an imperceptible stimulus until it is finally perceived.

A) adjustment
B) constant stimuli
C) limits
D) matching
E) sensation and perception
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The method of _______ requires the observer to alter the strength of a stimulus until it matches some criterion.

A) adjustment
B) constant stimuli
C) limits
D) matching
E) sensation and perception
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
When setting up a new monitor or video game, there is often a step in which you change the brightness of the screen until a logo is just barely visible. This is an example of

A) the method of limits.
B) the method of constant stimuli.
C) the method of adjustment.
D) the method of sensory tuning.
E) cross-modality matching.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
_______ is a psychophysical method in which the participant assigns values according to perceived magnitudes of the stimuli.

A) The method of limits
B) The method of constant stimuli
C) The method of adjustment
D) Magnitude estimation
E) Cross-modality matching
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
If you are asked to taste a lemon and then adjust a light until it is as bright as the lemon is sour, you have been asked to engage in

A) magnitude estimation.
B) the method of constant stimuli.
C) the method of limits.
D) signal detection.
E) cross-modality matching.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Signal detection theory consists of

A) detectors.
B) receivers.
C) transducers.
D) signal and noise.
E) thresholds.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Finding a tumor in an x-ray can be thought of as searching for a(n) _______ amidst _______.

A) signal; noise
B) noise; signal
C) sensation; perceptions
D) perception; sensations
E) absolute threshold; just noticeable differences
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
This concept refers to the observer's willingness to say they detected a signal.

A) Just noticeable difference
B) Sensitivity
C) Criterion
D) Two-point threshold
E) Perception
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
In signal detection theory, the _______ is an internal threshold that is set by the observer.

A) criterion
B) shift
C) sensitivity
D) method of limits
E) method of adjustment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
In signal detection theory, the _______ is a value that defines the ease with which an observer can tell the difference between the presence and absence of a stimulus, or the difference between stimulus 1 and stimulus 2.

A) criterion
B) shift
C) sensitivity
D) method of limits
E) method of adjustment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
If a stimulus is present and the observer reports it as present, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
If a stimulus is present and the observer reports it as absent, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
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42
If a stimulus is absent but the observer reports it as present, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
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43
If a stimulus is absent and the observer reports it as absent, this is called a

A) hit.
B) miss.
C) false alarm.
D) correct rejection.
E) criterion.
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44
The criminal justice system in United States is designed to be biased such that it would rather let a guilty person go free than convict an innocent person. In terms of signal detection theory, the courts would rather have a _______ than a _______.

A) hit; miss
B) miss; correct rejection
C) correct rejection; miss
D) false alarm; miss
E) miss; false alarm
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45
Airport security is very tight. If a traveler even jokes about a bomb, they are detained and questioned to ensure that no real terrorist threat succeeds. In terms of signal detection theory, airport security would rather have a _______ than a _______.

A) hit; miss
B) miss; correct rejection
C) correct rejection; miss
D) false alarm; miss
E) miss; false alarm
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46
Refer to the graph.
<strong>Refer to the graph.   The curves in the graph are known as</strong> A) stimuli ratios. B) ROC curves. C) JNDs. D) signal curves. E) power curves. The curves in the graph are known as

A) stimuli ratios.
B) ROC curves.
C) JNDs.
D) signal curves.
E) power curves.
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47
The doctrine of specific nerve energies involves the stimulation of

A) sensory fibers.
B) sensations.
C) nerve endings.
D) signals.
E) All the above
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48
If you are in a completely dark room and accidentally hit your head, you might see "stars." Even though there was only mechanical stimulation to your eyes and no light, you still had an experience of light. This fact is predicted by

A) dark adaptation.
B) the equal stimulation principle.
C) the doctrine of specific nerve energies.
D) the Müller principle.
E) Stevens' power law.
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49
The twelve pairs of nerves that originate in the brain stem and reach sense organs and muscles through openings in the skull are called the

A) Müller mileau.
B) specific nerves.
C) nervy dozen.
D) cranial nerves.
E) cranial tracts.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
If you had a stroke that damaged your frontal lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
If you had a stroke that damaged your temporal lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
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Unlock Deck
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52
If you had a stroke that damaged your occipital lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
If you had a stroke that damaged your parietal lobe, which sense would be most likely to be impaired?

A) Smell
B) Touch
C) Hearing
D) Vision
E) Balance
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
_______ invented the ophthalmoscope, studied hearing, and first determined the speed of neural impulses.

A) Weber
B) Fechner
C) Locke
D) Ramón y Cajal
E) Helmholtz
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55
If you look at neurons through a microscope and draw detailed pictures of their structures, whose scientific career are you most likely emulating?

A) Weber
B) Fechner
C) Locke
D) Ramón y Cajal
E) Helmholtz
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k this deck
56
A synapse is the junction between _______ that permits information transfer.

A) stimuli
B) sensory fibers
C) neurons
D) signals
E) the spinal cord and brain
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57
The chemical substance used in neuronal communication at synapses is known as

A) axon.
B) receptor.
C) transducer.
D) lymph.
E) neurotransmitter.
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58
Which of the following is a method or set of methods that generates images of the structure and/or function of the brain in living, behaving humans?

A) X-rays
B) Neuroimaging
C) Mindscaping
D) Cognitive mapping
E) Free association
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k this deck
59
_______ imaging technology defines locations in the brain where neurons are especially active using safe radioactive isotopes to measure the metabolism of brain cells.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
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k this deck
60
_______ is a technique that, using multiple electrodes on the scalp, measures changes in electrical activity across populations of many neurons in the brain.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
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k this deck
61
_______ is an imaging technology that uses the responses of atoms to strong magnetic fields to form images of structures, like the brain.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
_______ is a technique that measures changes in magnetic activity across populations of many neurons in the brain.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
_______ makes it possible to measure localized patterns of activity in the brain by tracing changing levels of blood oxygenation.

A) EEG
B) MEG
C) MRI
D) fMRI
E) PET
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64
Which computational modeling approach can help scientists better understand how sensory systems develop based on experience?

A) Efficient coding methods
B) Bayesian models
C) Artificial neural networks
D) Predictive coding
E) Mathematical models
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k this deck
65
Which mathematical modeling technique is designed to discover the predictability and structure of inputs to the model?

A) Efficient coding models
B) Bayesian models
C) Stevens' power law
D) Weber's law
E) Deep neural networks
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k this deck
66
Which mathematical modeling technique excels at classifying stimuli such as images or sounds into categories?

A) Efficient coding models
B) Bayesian models
C) Stevens' power law
D) Weber's law
E) Deep neural networks
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k this deck
67
What is the difference between sensitivity and criterion in signal detection theory?
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68
What is the doctrine of specific nerve energies?
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69
Describe the following psychophysical methods: method of constant stimuli, method of limits, and method of adjustment.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.