Deck 3: Sensation and Perception

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Question
Your brain and your body's __________ are crucial for adapting to and functioning in the world around you.

A) sensory adaptations
B) sensory stimuli
C) perceptual adaptations
D) sensations
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Question
Human senses have evolved to help us __________ and _________ in the environment around us.

A) sense; adapt
B) adapt; survive
C) survive; thrive
D) sense; thrive
Question
You go to a beach in Hawaii, and you see the black lava sand, smell the saltwater, hear the waves crashing on the beach, notice the warm sun on your skin, and feel the sand between your toes. The steps involved in coding these sensory stimuli occur in what order?

A) Sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways; and neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain.
B) Neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways; neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain; and sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses.
C) Sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain; and neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways.
D) Neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain; sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; and neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways.
Question
If Miguel reports that his response time to the starter's pistol at a swim meet was faster than 100 milliseconds, you would argue that it was a false start, because __________.

A) research has shown that swimmers have higher absolute thresholds in response to the starting gun than runners' 150 millisecond threshold
B) research indicates that elite athletes have response time absolute thresholds around 250 milliseconds
C) research indicates that it is not possible for humans to have absolute thresholds of less than 100 milliseconds
D) research indicates that it is not possible for humans to have absolute thresholds of less than 125 milliseconds
Question
Suppose an air traffic controller is watching his screen on a heavy holiday travel day at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago. There is a near miss between two planes because the controller misses both the icons representing the planes, due to numerous distractors present on the screen, and the warning signal, due to the many surrounding sounds in the air traffic control tower. The controller claims he never saw the problem. This was most likely due to __________.

A) inattentional blindness
B) the principle of continuity
C) amplitude modification
D) retinal disparity
Question
Bottom-up processing is initiated by __________.

A) knowledge stored in higher brain centers
B) expectations based on past experiences
C) an environmental stimulus
D) beliefs about the environmental conditions
Question
People's sensations can be influenced by their previous experiences or expectations due to __________.

A) top-down processing
B) complex processing
C) bottom-up processing
D) perceptual constancy
Question
__________ is a phenomenon that occurs when the stimulation of one sensory system (e.g., hearing music) triggers a sensation in a completely different sensory system (e.g., seeing colors).

A) Sensory compensation
B) Cross-modal compensation
C) Confused sensory processing
D) Synesthesia
Question
When Katie looks at a display made up of black numbers on a white background, she sees the numbers in color. She does not realize that she perceives things differently than most of the population. Katie can be described as a __________.

A) synesthete
B) perceptually sensitive person
C) sensory compensator
D) cross-modal perceiver
Question
The visible spectrum refers to the __________.

A) portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye
B) intensity of light needed for people to see a stimulus
C) saturation range of a visual stimulus visible to humans
D) description of colors less visible to some men
Question
The shorter wavelengths in the visible spectrum are perceived as __________ colors.

A) red
B) violet
C) green
D) yellow
Question
Kevin is creating a pale blue light, which means that the stimulus will be made up of a __________.

A) combination of multiple wavelengths associated with blue light
B) combination of blue and yellow light
C) combination of blue and white light
D) single wavelength of blue light
Question
Gustav presents you with two graphs representing the same wavelength of yellow light. The wavelength on the first graph is significantly taller than the wavelength on the second, indicating that the first has a higher amplitude. He asks you which yellow light you think will appear brighter, based on the height of the wavelengths. Based on your knowledge of light waves, you reply, __________.

A) "The lower amplitude light will appear brighter than the higher amplitude light"
B) "The higher amplitude light will appear brighter than the lower amplitude light"
C) "The lights will appear equally bright, since they are the same wavelength-the amplitude of the light wave does not affect brightness perception"
D) "The higher amplitude light will appear brighter because it is more saturated than the lower amplitude light"
Question
The height of a wavelength provides information about the __________ of a light stimulus.

A) frequency
B) amplitude
C) saturation
D) purity
Question
Many people wear glasses to correct for problems with focusing light on the retina of the eye. In many cases, this focusing problem can be attributed to __________.

A) the diameter of the pupil
B) the length of the eye
C) the color of the pupil
D) the shape of the iris
Question
Nearsighted is to farsighted as __________ is to __________.

A) cornea; lens
B) hyperopia; myopia
C) lens; cornea
D) myopia; hyperopia
Question
Which layer of the eye contains the photoreceptors?

A) Optic nerve
B) Retina
C) Cornea
D) Lens
Question
Where in the eye does a physical light stimulus become a neural message?

A) Optic nerve
B) Photoreceptors
C) Blind spot
D) Visual cortex
Question
Which of the following is true of rods?

A) They respond to color information.
B) They are found mainly in the fovea.
C) They operate mainly in the daytime-in bright levels of illumination.
D) They make up the majority of photoreceptors found in the retina.
Question
The optic nerve functions most similarly to which of the following?

A) The starter in a car
B) A toilet plunger
C) A telephone wire
D) A ping-pong table
Question
The "blind spot" in each eye is due to the __________.

A) corneal surface being inconsistent
B) concentration of cones in the foveal area of the retina
C) optic nerve passing through the retina as it leaves the eye
D) concentration of rods outside of the foveal region of the retina
Question
As the two optic nerves project to the back of the brain, they cross over at a junction called the __________.

A) optic junction
B) optic chiasm
C) optic cross-projection
D) optic lobe
Question
The idea that the eye contains three cone types-red, green, and blue-that allow us to see color based on their combined response is called the __________.

A) opponent-process theory
B) cone response theory
C) trichromatic theory
D) combined receptor color theory
Question
Which of the following is true about color blindness?

A) Only men have color blindness.
B) People may be unable to see hues at all.
C) It is more common in men than women.
D) All people with color blindness have rods only.
Question
Researchers have found that __________ allows color blind monkeys to distinguish between red and green hues-a task they could not perform previously.

A) light therapy
B) opponent-process therapy
C) trichromatic therapy
D) gene therapy
Question
Pitch is to frequency as __________ is to __________.

A) frequency; amplitude
B) volume; timbre
C) volume; amplitude
D) timbre; wave
Question
The basic function of the pinna is to __________.

A) protect the hair cells
B) funnel sound waves into the ear canal
C) amplify low-intensity sounds to detectable levels
D) transfer sound wave vibrations to the ossicles
Question
The eardrum (auditory canal) is responsible for __________.

A) protecting the hair cells
B) transferring sound wave vibrations to the ossicles
C) funneling sound waves into the ear canal
D) amplifying low intensity sounds to detectable levels
Question
What is the order in which the ear processes a sound wave, starting with the outer ear?

A) Pinna, auditory canal, eardrum, ossicles, cochlea, and auditory nerve
B) Pinna, eardrum, auditory canal, ossicles, auditory nerve, and cochlea
C) Auditory canal, pinna, eardrum, auditory nerve, ossicles, and cochlea
D) Auditory canal, eardrum, pinna, ossicles, cochlea, and auditory nerve
Question
The primary function of the ossicles is to __________.

A) transduce sound wave information into a neural stimulus
B) transfer sound wave vibrations to the eardrum
C) funnel sound waves into the ear canal
D) transfer sound wave vibrations to the inner ear
Question
The __________ located in the cochlea, on the __________.

A) hair cells are; basilar membrane
B) basilar membrane is; hair cells
C) auditory nerve is; hair cells
D) hair cells are; auditory nerve
Question
When sound wave vibrations reach the hair cells, the hair cells __________, which transduces the sound wave stimulus into a neural impulse.

A) bend and break
B) stretch and break
C) stretch and bend
D) break and reattach
Question
Axons from the hair cells form the __________.

A) hearing nerve
B) basilar nerve
C) auditory nerve
D) cochlear nerve
Question
Mia suffered chronic ear infections during childhood. On a recent visit to her doctor, she mentioned that she had been having problems hearing what others are saying. Her doctor explained that she is most likely suffering from __________.

A) sensorineural hearing loss
B) tinnitus
C) conductive hearing loss
D) transient hearing loss
Question
Sara loves listening to music on her individual audio device, but she has heard that permanent hearing loss can result if she listens to her music at risky sound levels. Based on research indicating that __________, Sara minimizes the chance of this happening by listening to her music with background-noise-cancelling ear buds.

A) people are more likely to raise the volume to risky levels in noisy surroundings
B) people who block background noise are not exposed to risky noise levels
C) background noise is the main reason of hearing loss
D) ear buds minimize the effects of risky sound levels by reducing the volume of music
Question
The majority of mild to moderate hearing problems are treated with __________.

A) cochlear implants
B) ear surgery
C) hearing aids
D) blockage removals
Question
The chemical senses are __________.

A) pheromones and taste
B) touch and smell
C) smell and taste
D) smell and pheromones
Question
Grace has been working out at a weight-lifting gym with mostly male members, resulting in exposure to androstadienone. She notices that after being at the gym, she experiences changes in mood. When she tells you about this experience, you explain that __________.

A) pheromones produce menstrual synchrony
B) steroid use in males causes a deterrent to sex
C) she is unable to have a menstrual cycle because she is not exposed to enough female sweat
D) this is most likely a result of pheromones naturally occurring in male sweat
Question
Holly is 96 years old and has difficulty perceiving smells that her grandchildren easily notice. She most likely has a smell-related condition known as __________.

A) presbyosmia
B) hyperosmia
C) phantosmia
D) anosmia
Question
An interesting feature of olfactory cells is that, unlike most neurological cells, they __________.

A) respond to both visual and olfactory stimuli
B) regenerate every few weeks
C) respond to any chemical stimulus
D) are resistant to damage from dangerous chemical stimuli
Question
The basic taste sensation of savory was discovered most recently and is associated with the detection of __________.

A) quinine
B) phenylthiocarbamide
C) sodium
D) glutamate
Question
The placement and sensitivity of your receptor cells determines whether you perceive __________ sensation when you eat spicy foods.

A) a sour or a burning
B) a burning or a stinging
C) a stinging or a pain
D) a pain or a pleasant
Question
Vince has a sinus infection, resulting in nasal congestion. He notices that his favorite pizza, from his favorite restaurant, tastes different. In fact, the pizza does not have much flavor at all. The cause is most likely that __________.

A) nasal congestion blocks the olfactory receptor sites
B) flavor relies on your ability to smell
C) flavor requires the ability of saliva to penetrate the mucous in the nasal cavity
D) nasal congestion thickens the saliva, resulting in an inability to transport chemical stimuli
Question
Driving home on the Fourth of July, Andrei must stop at a sobriety checkpoint. The officer asks Andrei to take a test in which he closes his eyes, reaches his hands out to the side, and touches his nose with one finger. He is asked to take this test because the officers know that alcohol impairs the __________ sense.

A) touch
B) coordination
C) vestibular
D) location
Question
The skin senses can best be described as including the sensations of __________.

A) pressure, temperature, balance, and pain
B) the locations of body parts in relation to the ground and to each other
C) movements and body positions
D) pressure, pain, heat, and cold
Question
Proprioceptors detect __________.

A) pain in your limbs and extremities
B) touch and balance of body parts
C) external temperature relative to your body's temperature
D) the orientation of our body parts in space
Question
Standing on one foot with your eyes closed may be more difficult than with your eyes open. This most accurately illustrates which of the following senses?

A) Vestibular
B) Kinesthetic
C) Somasthetic
D) Anomalous
Question
Dizziness, nausea, and disorientation may result if the information from the eyes conflicts with that from the semicircular canals. This sensory conflict results in __________.

A) body imbalance
B) kinesthetic disconnect
C) motion sickness
D) vestibular confusion
Question
A person feels pain when excessive or extreme __________ are applied to the surface of the skin.

A) points or temperatures
B) temperatures or pressure
C) motion or resistance
D) resistance or pressure
Question
Denair suffers from a genetic mutation that has left him without the ability to detect pain and temperature. Although his friends think it would be nice not to feel pain, they have no idea what sort of inconvenience and danger this kind of illness can cause. From what disorder does Denair suffer?

A) Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis
B) Congenital insensitivity to pain with pain hindrosis
C) Congenital insensitivity to pain with hyperhydrosis
D) Congenital insensitivity to pain with keratoconus
Question
Research indicates that people who deal with chronic pain, pain lasting longer than six months, report higher rates of __________.

A) depression and inactivity
B) pain-induced psychotic episodes
C) homicidal and suicidal ideations
D) depression and suicide
Question
Pain is described as a multidimensional experience because it involves not only physical receptors in the body but also __________.

A) social and environmental expectations
B) social and cultural experiences
C) social and cultural expectations and experiences
D) social and environmental expectations and experiences
Question
Your best friend is going to have a medical procedure that might cause some pain during recovery. He is very concerned about how he will deal with this. Knowing what you do about how pain works, you would advise him that __________ are psychological aspects that can influence how pain is perceived?

A) anxiety, avoidance, and acupuncture
B) acupuncture, interpretation, and attention
C) anxiety, attention, and interpretation
D) attention, interpretation, and acupuncture
Question
Marley has been experiencing chronic back pain and has decided to try acupuncture to relieve it. One reason that acupuncture may work is because the needles __________.

A) stimulate the body to increase the release of endorphins
B) cause smaller nerve fibers to open sensory gates in the spinal cord
C) cause smaller nerve fibers to decrease the release of endorphins
D) stimulate the body to open sensory gates in the spinal cord
Question
Gestalt psychologists assert that the brain organizes sensory experiences according to basic __________.

A) perceptions and principles
B) laws and principles
C) perceptions and laws
D) laws and features
Question
Terri is headed to the student center to get lunch during the lunch-hour rush. There is a sea of sensory information in the form of students, buildings, trees, and other environmental stimuli. Terri is able to spot her friend Josh due to her ability to make distinctions between sensory information and focus her attention on what is important in the visual scene. This is because Terri organizes the visual scene into __________.

A) figure and ground
B) image and background
C) primary stimulus and secondary stimuli
D) images and ground
Question
An example of a group or organization that tries to make the figure and ground similar, or difficult to distinguish, would be __________.

A) Walmart
B) a legal office
C) St. Jude Hospital
D) the Army
Question
When viewing a 3D movie, the red-and-green glasses are used to create the 3D effect. The glasses are needed so __________.

A) each eye combines both images
B) each eye only sees half the image
C) the left eye only sees the image on the right screen and the right eye only sees the image on the left screen
D) each eye only gets one image
Question
Through measuring infant perception, Robert Frantz was able to study the __________.

A) auditory brain mechanisms in infants
B) infant gaze reflex
C) smell preferences of infants
D) workings of the infant brain
Question
Robert Fantz's creation of a(n) __________ allowed for the study of the infant brain and provided a mechanism for researchers to study human development.

A) neural output measuring device
B) looking chamber
C) sensory response box
D) auditory funnel
Question
Select one of the five major senses and use it as an example to explain the perceptual process. Describe the physical stimulus, how it reaches the sensory receptors, the process of transduction, and the pathway up to the brain.
Question
Compare and contrast bottom-up processing and top-down processing, and provide an example of each.
Question
Describe how we process color information using both the trichromatic and opponent-process theories of color vision. Explain why each of these theories explains color vision and why they are not in competition.
Question
Compare and contrast conductive hearing loss and sensorineural hearing loss in terms of the mechanism underlying the hearing loss, the treatments used for each, and the possibility of reversing the hearing loss.
Question
Identify and describe the different types of smell-related conditions associated with a loss of smell. Based on the description of each condition, identify how the symptoms are similar and how the conditions differ. Lastly, describe the probability for improvement over time.
Question
Define pheromones and describe an industry that has incorporated the role of pheromones in their marketing campaigns. Explain why the majority of these claims are actually scams.
Question
Identify and describe differences in taste perception due to taste receptors differences, inherited characteristics, changes as we age, and taste disorders. Make sure you explain the mechanism underlying these differences and how it affects the ability to taste.
Question
Identify the specialized receptor types associated with touch and explain how they are related to our perception of pain. Give an example of each pain stimulus identified.
Question
List the psychological factors associated with our experience of pain. Describe how knowledge of these factors can be used to reduce the experience of pain.
Question
Define a perceptual constancy, and describe and give examples of the perceptual constancies identified in your text.
Question
Describe two monocular pictorial depth cues and two binocular cues for depth perception. Explain why we have two different types of cues for depth.
Question
Define perceptual learning and explain how the concepts of perceptual expertise and perceptual set are related to perceptual learning.
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Deck 3: Sensation and Perception
1
Your brain and your body's __________ are crucial for adapting to and functioning in the world around you.

A) sensory adaptations
B) sensory stimuli
C) perceptual adaptations
D) sensations
sensations
2
Human senses have evolved to help us __________ and _________ in the environment around us.

A) sense; adapt
B) adapt; survive
C) survive; thrive
D) sense; thrive
survive; thrive
3
You go to a beach in Hawaii, and you see the black lava sand, smell the saltwater, hear the waves crashing on the beach, notice the warm sun on your skin, and feel the sand between your toes. The steps involved in coding these sensory stimuli occur in what order?

A) Sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways; and neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain.
B) Neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways; neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain; and sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses.
C) Sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain; and neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways.
D) Neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain; sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; and neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways.
Sensory receptors transform the environmental stimulus into nerve impulses; neural messages are passed through specific nerve pathways; and neural information is interpreted in specialized sensory areas in the brain.
4
If Miguel reports that his response time to the starter's pistol at a swim meet was faster than 100 milliseconds, you would argue that it was a false start, because __________.

A) research has shown that swimmers have higher absolute thresholds in response to the starting gun than runners' 150 millisecond threshold
B) research indicates that elite athletes have response time absolute thresholds around 250 milliseconds
C) research indicates that it is not possible for humans to have absolute thresholds of less than 100 milliseconds
D) research indicates that it is not possible for humans to have absolute thresholds of less than 125 milliseconds
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5
Suppose an air traffic controller is watching his screen on a heavy holiday travel day at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago. There is a near miss between two planes because the controller misses both the icons representing the planes, due to numerous distractors present on the screen, and the warning signal, due to the many surrounding sounds in the air traffic control tower. The controller claims he never saw the problem. This was most likely due to __________.

A) inattentional blindness
B) the principle of continuity
C) amplitude modification
D) retinal disparity
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6
Bottom-up processing is initiated by __________.

A) knowledge stored in higher brain centers
B) expectations based on past experiences
C) an environmental stimulus
D) beliefs about the environmental conditions
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k this deck
7
People's sensations can be influenced by their previous experiences or expectations due to __________.

A) top-down processing
B) complex processing
C) bottom-up processing
D) perceptual constancy
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k this deck
8
__________ is a phenomenon that occurs when the stimulation of one sensory system (e.g., hearing music) triggers a sensation in a completely different sensory system (e.g., seeing colors).

A) Sensory compensation
B) Cross-modal compensation
C) Confused sensory processing
D) Synesthesia
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k this deck
9
When Katie looks at a display made up of black numbers on a white background, she sees the numbers in color. She does not realize that she perceives things differently than most of the population. Katie can be described as a __________.

A) synesthete
B) perceptually sensitive person
C) sensory compensator
D) cross-modal perceiver
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10
The visible spectrum refers to the __________.

A) portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye
B) intensity of light needed for people to see a stimulus
C) saturation range of a visual stimulus visible to humans
D) description of colors less visible to some men
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11
The shorter wavelengths in the visible spectrum are perceived as __________ colors.

A) red
B) violet
C) green
D) yellow
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12
Kevin is creating a pale blue light, which means that the stimulus will be made up of a __________.

A) combination of multiple wavelengths associated with blue light
B) combination of blue and yellow light
C) combination of blue and white light
D) single wavelength of blue light
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13
Gustav presents you with two graphs representing the same wavelength of yellow light. The wavelength on the first graph is significantly taller than the wavelength on the second, indicating that the first has a higher amplitude. He asks you which yellow light you think will appear brighter, based on the height of the wavelengths. Based on your knowledge of light waves, you reply, __________.

A) "The lower amplitude light will appear brighter than the higher amplitude light"
B) "The higher amplitude light will appear brighter than the lower amplitude light"
C) "The lights will appear equally bright, since they are the same wavelength-the amplitude of the light wave does not affect brightness perception"
D) "The higher amplitude light will appear brighter because it is more saturated than the lower amplitude light"
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14
The height of a wavelength provides information about the __________ of a light stimulus.

A) frequency
B) amplitude
C) saturation
D) purity
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15
Many people wear glasses to correct for problems with focusing light on the retina of the eye. In many cases, this focusing problem can be attributed to __________.

A) the diameter of the pupil
B) the length of the eye
C) the color of the pupil
D) the shape of the iris
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k this deck
16
Nearsighted is to farsighted as __________ is to __________.

A) cornea; lens
B) hyperopia; myopia
C) lens; cornea
D) myopia; hyperopia
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17
Which layer of the eye contains the photoreceptors?

A) Optic nerve
B) Retina
C) Cornea
D) Lens
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18
Where in the eye does a physical light stimulus become a neural message?

A) Optic nerve
B) Photoreceptors
C) Blind spot
D) Visual cortex
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which of the following is true of rods?

A) They respond to color information.
B) They are found mainly in the fovea.
C) They operate mainly in the daytime-in bright levels of illumination.
D) They make up the majority of photoreceptors found in the retina.
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20
The optic nerve functions most similarly to which of the following?

A) The starter in a car
B) A toilet plunger
C) A telephone wire
D) A ping-pong table
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21
The "blind spot" in each eye is due to the __________.

A) corneal surface being inconsistent
B) concentration of cones in the foveal area of the retina
C) optic nerve passing through the retina as it leaves the eye
D) concentration of rods outside of the foveal region of the retina
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22
As the two optic nerves project to the back of the brain, they cross over at a junction called the __________.

A) optic junction
B) optic chiasm
C) optic cross-projection
D) optic lobe
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23
The idea that the eye contains three cone types-red, green, and blue-that allow us to see color based on their combined response is called the __________.

A) opponent-process theory
B) cone response theory
C) trichromatic theory
D) combined receptor color theory
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Unlock for access to all 72 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following is true about color blindness?

A) Only men have color blindness.
B) People may be unable to see hues at all.
C) It is more common in men than women.
D) All people with color blindness have rods only.
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k this deck
25
Researchers have found that __________ allows color blind monkeys to distinguish between red and green hues-a task they could not perform previously.

A) light therapy
B) opponent-process therapy
C) trichromatic therapy
D) gene therapy
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Pitch is to frequency as __________ is to __________.

A) frequency; amplitude
B) volume; timbre
C) volume; amplitude
D) timbre; wave
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27
The basic function of the pinna is to __________.

A) protect the hair cells
B) funnel sound waves into the ear canal
C) amplify low-intensity sounds to detectable levels
D) transfer sound wave vibrations to the ossicles
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k this deck
28
The eardrum (auditory canal) is responsible for __________.

A) protecting the hair cells
B) transferring sound wave vibrations to the ossicles
C) funneling sound waves into the ear canal
D) amplifying low intensity sounds to detectable levels
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29
What is the order in which the ear processes a sound wave, starting with the outer ear?

A) Pinna, auditory canal, eardrum, ossicles, cochlea, and auditory nerve
B) Pinna, eardrum, auditory canal, ossicles, auditory nerve, and cochlea
C) Auditory canal, pinna, eardrum, auditory nerve, ossicles, and cochlea
D) Auditory canal, eardrum, pinna, ossicles, cochlea, and auditory nerve
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30
The primary function of the ossicles is to __________.

A) transduce sound wave information into a neural stimulus
B) transfer sound wave vibrations to the eardrum
C) funnel sound waves into the ear canal
D) transfer sound wave vibrations to the inner ear
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31
The __________ located in the cochlea, on the __________.

A) hair cells are; basilar membrane
B) basilar membrane is; hair cells
C) auditory nerve is; hair cells
D) hair cells are; auditory nerve
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32
When sound wave vibrations reach the hair cells, the hair cells __________, which transduces the sound wave stimulus into a neural impulse.

A) bend and break
B) stretch and break
C) stretch and bend
D) break and reattach
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33
Axons from the hair cells form the __________.

A) hearing nerve
B) basilar nerve
C) auditory nerve
D) cochlear nerve
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34
Mia suffered chronic ear infections during childhood. On a recent visit to her doctor, she mentioned that she had been having problems hearing what others are saying. Her doctor explained that she is most likely suffering from __________.

A) sensorineural hearing loss
B) tinnitus
C) conductive hearing loss
D) transient hearing loss
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35
Sara loves listening to music on her individual audio device, but she has heard that permanent hearing loss can result if she listens to her music at risky sound levels. Based on research indicating that __________, Sara minimizes the chance of this happening by listening to her music with background-noise-cancelling ear buds.

A) people are more likely to raise the volume to risky levels in noisy surroundings
B) people who block background noise are not exposed to risky noise levels
C) background noise is the main reason of hearing loss
D) ear buds minimize the effects of risky sound levels by reducing the volume of music
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36
The majority of mild to moderate hearing problems are treated with __________.

A) cochlear implants
B) ear surgery
C) hearing aids
D) blockage removals
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37
The chemical senses are __________.

A) pheromones and taste
B) touch and smell
C) smell and taste
D) smell and pheromones
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38
Grace has been working out at a weight-lifting gym with mostly male members, resulting in exposure to androstadienone. She notices that after being at the gym, she experiences changes in mood. When she tells you about this experience, you explain that __________.

A) pheromones produce menstrual synchrony
B) steroid use in males causes a deterrent to sex
C) she is unable to have a menstrual cycle because she is not exposed to enough female sweat
D) this is most likely a result of pheromones naturally occurring in male sweat
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39
Holly is 96 years old and has difficulty perceiving smells that her grandchildren easily notice. She most likely has a smell-related condition known as __________.

A) presbyosmia
B) hyperosmia
C) phantosmia
D) anosmia
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40
An interesting feature of olfactory cells is that, unlike most neurological cells, they __________.

A) respond to both visual and olfactory stimuli
B) regenerate every few weeks
C) respond to any chemical stimulus
D) are resistant to damage from dangerous chemical stimuli
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41
The basic taste sensation of savory was discovered most recently and is associated with the detection of __________.

A) quinine
B) phenylthiocarbamide
C) sodium
D) glutamate
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42
The placement and sensitivity of your receptor cells determines whether you perceive __________ sensation when you eat spicy foods.

A) a sour or a burning
B) a burning or a stinging
C) a stinging or a pain
D) a pain or a pleasant
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43
Vince has a sinus infection, resulting in nasal congestion. He notices that his favorite pizza, from his favorite restaurant, tastes different. In fact, the pizza does not have much flavor at all. The cause is most likely that __________.

A) nasal congestion blocks the olfactory receptor sites
B) flavor relies on your ability to smell
C) flavor requires the ability of saliva to penetrate the mucous in the nasal cavity
D) nasal congestion thickens the saliva, resulting in an inability to transport chemical stimuli
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44
Driving home on the Fourth of July, Andrei must stop at a sobriety checkpoint. The officer asks Andrei to take a test in which he closes his eyes, reaches his hands out to the side, and touches his nose with one finger. He is asked to take this test because the officers know that alcohol impairs the __________ sense.

A) touch
B) coordination
C) vestibular
D) location
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45
The skin senses can best be described as including the sensations of __________.

A) pressure, temperature, balance, and pain
B) the locations of body parts in relation to the ground and to each other
C) movements and body positions
D) pressure, pain, heat, and cold
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46
Proprioceptors detect __________.

A) pain in your limbs and extremities
B) touch and balance of body parts
C) external temperature relative to your body's temperature
D) the orientation of our body parts in space
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47
Standing on one foot with your eyes closed may be more difficult than with your eyes open. This most accurately illustrates which of the following senses?

A) Vestibular
B) Kinesthetic
C) Somasthetic
D) Anomalous
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48
Dizziness, nausea, and disorientation may result if the information from the eyes conflicts with that from the semicircular canals. This sensory conflict results in __________.

A) body imbalance
B) kinesthetic disconnect
C) motion sickness
D) vestibular confusion
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49
A person feels pain when excessive or extreme __________ are applied to the surface of the skin.

A) points or temperatures
B) temperatures or pressure
C) motion or resistance
D) resistance or pressure
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50
Denair suffers from a genetic mutation that has left him without the ability to detect pain and temperature. Although his friends think it would be nice not to feel pain, they have no idea what sort of inconvenience and danger this kind of illness can cause. From what disorder does Denair suffer?

A) Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis
B) Congenital insensitivity to pain with pain hindrosis
C) Congenital insensitivity to pain with hyperhydrosis
D) Congenital insensitivity to pain with keratoconus
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51
Research indicates that people who deal with chronic pain, pain lasting longer than six months, report higher rates of __________.

A) depression and inactivity
B) pain-induced psychotic episodes
C) homicidal and suicidal ideations
D) depression and suicide
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52
Pain is described as a multidimensional experience because it involves not only physical receptors in the body but also __________.

A) social and environmental expectations
B) social and cultural experiences
C) social and cultural expectations and experiences
D) social and environmental expectations and experiences
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53
Your best friend is going to have a medical procedure that might cause some pain during recovery. He is very concerned about how he will deal with this. Knowing what you do about how pain works, you would advise him that __________ are psychological aspects that can influence how pain is perceived?

A) anxiety, avoidance, and acupuncture
B) acupuncture, interpretation, and attention
C) anxiety, attention, and interpretation
D) attention, interpretation, and acupuncture
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54
Marley has been experiencing chronic back pain and has decided to try acupuncture to relieve it. One reason that acupuncture may work is because the needles __________.

A) stimulate the body to increase the release of endorphins
B) cause smaller nerve fibers to open sensory gates in the spinal cord
C) cause smaller nerve fibers to decrease the release of endorphins
D) stimulate the body to open sensory gates in the spinal cord
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55
Gestalt psychologists assert that the brain organizes sensory experiences according to basic __________.

A) perceptions and principles
B) laws and principles
C) perceptions and laws
D) laws and features
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56
Terri is headed to the student center to get lunch during the lunch-hour rush. There is a sea of sensory information in the form of students, buildings, trees, and other environmental stimuli. Terri is able to spot her friend Josh due to her ability to make distinctions between sensory information and focus her attention on what is important in the visual scene. This is because Terri organizes the visual scene into __________.

A) figure and ground
B) image and background
C) primary stimulus and secondary stimuli
D) images and ground
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57
An example of a group or organization that tries to make the figure and ground similar, or difficult to distinguish, would be __________.

A) Walmart
B) a legal office
C) St. Jude Hospital
D) the Army
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58
When viewing a 3D movie, the red-and-green glasses are used to create the 3D effect. The glasses are needed so __________.

A) each eye combines both images
B) each eye only sees half the image
C) the left eye only sees the image on the right screen and the right eye only sees the image on the left screen
D) each eye only gets one image
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59
Through measuring infant perception, Robert Frantz was able to study the __________.

A) auditory brain mechanisms in infants
B) infant gaze reflex
C) smell preferences of infants
D) workings of the infant brain
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60
Robert Fantz's creation of a(n) __________ allowed for the study of the infant brain and provided a mechanism for researchers to study human development.

A) neural output measuring device
B) looking chamber
C) sensory response box
D) auditory funnel
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61
Select one of the five major senses and use it as an example to explain the perceptual process. Describe the physical stimulus, how it reaches the sensory receptors, the process of transduction, and the pathway up to the brain.
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62
Compare and contrast bottom-up processing and top-down processing, and provide an example of each.
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63
Describe how we process color information using both the trichromatic and opponent-process theories of color vision. Explain why each of these theories explains color vision and why they are not in competition.
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64
Compare and contrast conductive hearing loss and sensorineural hearing loss in terms of the mechanism underlying the hearing loss, the treatments used for each, and the possibility of reversing the hearing loss.
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65
Identify and describe the different types of smell-related conditions associated with a loss of smell. Based on the description of each condition, identify how the symptoms are similar and how the conditions differ. Lastly, describe the probability for improvement over time.
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66
Define pheromones and describe an industry that has incorporated the role of pheromones in their marketing campaigns. Explain why the majority of these claims are actually scams.
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67
Identify and describe differences in taste perception due to taste receptors differences, inherited characteristics, changes as we age, and taste disorders. Make sure you explain the mechanism underlying these differences and how it affects the ability to taste.
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68
Identify the specialized receptor types associated with touch and explain how they are related to our perception of pain. Give an example of each pain stimulus identified.
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69
List the psychological factors associated with our experience of pain. Describe how knowledge of these factors can be used to reduce the experience of pain.
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70
Define a perceptual constancy, and describe and give examples of the perceptual constancies identified in your text.
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71
Describe two monocular pictorial depth cues and two binocular cues for depth perception. Explain why we have two different types of cues for depth.
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72
Define perceptual learning and explain how the concepts of perceptual expertise and perceptual set are related to perceptual learning.
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