Deck 3: Sensation and Perception

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Question
According to its definition, the absolute threshold is the minimum amount of sensory stimulation that a person can

A) detect at least once ten trials.
B) never detect.
C) detect 50 percent of the time
D) always detect.
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Question
Weber's law best fits people with

A) specialized training.
B) both good abilities and specialized training.
C) average sensitivities
D) exceptionally good abilities.
Question
In psychophysics, JND stands for

A) Jung's noticeable difference.
B) just neural distance.
C) Jung's neural distance.
D) just noticeable difference
Question
The minimum amount of physical stimulation necessary for us to experience a sensation 50 percent of the time is called the

A) blind spot.
B) difference threshold.
C) figure to ground ratio.
D) absolute threshold
Question
The process by which sensory receptors convert sensory stimulation into neural impulses is called

A) refraction.
B) convergence.
C) sublimation.
D) transduction
Question
Weber's law best fits sensory stimuli that are

A) fairly weak.
B) neither very strong nor very weak
C) fairly weak through very strong.
D) very strong.
Question
Detecting a candle 48 kilometres away on a clear, dark night, and tasting a teaspoon of sugar dissolved in 9 litres of water are examples of

A) absolute thresholds
B) difference thresholds.
C) perceptual constancies.
D) transduction.
Question
________ furnishes the raw material of sensory experience; ________ provides the finished product.

A) Perception; sensation
B) Perception; transduction
C) Sensation; perception
D) Sensation; transduction
Question
The process through which we interpret and organize information brought to us by our various senses is called

A) sensation.
B) somnambulism.
C) convergence.
D) perception
Question
Which of the following is listed in your textbook as a "secondary sense?"

A) Smell
B) Vision
C) Balance
D) Touch
Question
Psychologists define the absolute threshold as the minimum amount of sensory stimulation which can be detected

A) 25 percent of the time.
B) 50 percent of the time
C) 75 percent of the time.
D) 100 percent of the time
Question
The process by which sensory receptors convert sensory stimulation-light, sound, odours, etc.-into neural impulses is

A) transduction
B) stimulus generalization.
C) perception.
D) signal detection.
Question
The discrimination of a stimulus from background noise and the decision that the stimulus is present combine in the view known as

A) top-down processing.
B) just noticeable difference.
C) Weber's Law.
D) signal detection theory
Question
The process through which the senses detect sensory stimuli and transmit them to the brain is called

A) perception.
B) reception.
C) consciousness.
D) sensation
Question
Tina was walking through the woods, and she saw something moving. When she came closer to it, she realized the moving animal was a deer. Being able to identify the animal was a product of

A) convergence.
B) perception
C) reception.
D) aphasia.
Question
S.B.'s failure to adapt to vision after fifty years of blindness points out the difference between sensation and

A) dreaming.
B) illusion.
C) perception
D) transduction.
Question
Signal detection theory suggests that deciding whether a stimulus is present depends partly on the ________ and partly on the potential gain or loss associated with deciding that it is present or absent.

A) the strength of the stimulus
B) the focus of your attention
C) probability that the stimulus will occur
D) level of your anxiety
Question
"The information brought to us by our various senses" is a description of

A) sensation
B) reception.
C) perception.
D) transduction.
Question
Which of the following statements correctly describes our ability to detect differences in stimulus intensity?

A) The amount of change needed to detect differences stimulation is identical for each sense.
B) Larger changes strong stimuli are needed to detect changes than are needed for weak stimuli
C) The same amount of change is needed to detect changes weak stimuli and strong stimuli.
D) Larger changes weak stimuli are needed to detect changes than are needed for strong stimuli.
Question
Sensory information is organized and interpreted by the brain through the process of

A) transduction.
B) consciousness.
C) perception
D) sensation.
Question
Which of the following is not true with regard to the functioning of the pupils in the eye?

A) Two muscles the iris control pupil size.
B) Pupils help regulate the amount of light admitted to the eye.
C) Pupils can contract to the size of the head of a pin.
D) We can voluntary control pupil contraction
Question
Transduction refers to

A) the conversion of sensory stimulationto neural impulses by the sensory receptors
B) illusions that result from overgeneralizing from experiences.
C) the process of subliminal perception.
D) hallucinations that occur due to sensory deprivation situations.
Question
The amount of light that enters into the eye is controlled by the

A) lens.
B) retina.
C) cornea.
D) iris
Question
As light enters the outer surface of the eye, what structure bends the rays of light so that they travel through the pupils?

A) Cornea
B) Lens
C) Iris
D) Retina
Question
In the eye the information contained in light makes contact with the _________ first; and with the __________ last

A) fovea…lens
B) lens…fovea
C) optic nerve...cornea
D) cornea…optic nerve
Question
Which of the following is the correct order for light as it moves toward the retina?

A) lens, cornea, pupil
B) pupil, lens, cornea
C) cornea, pupil, lens
D) pupil, cornea, lens
Question
As we grow older, our lens loses some elasticity-that is, it loses the ability to change its shape to accommodate for near vision, a condition called

A) accommodation failure.
B) myopia.
C) presbyopia
D) anhedonia.
Question
The tough, transparent, protective layer covering the front of the eye is called the

A) iris.
B) pupil.
C) lens.
D) cornea
Question
Sensory stimulation from the external world is converted into neural impulses by the

A) brain.
B) sensory receptors
C) thalamus.
D) sensory glia.
Question
The two muscles in the ________ dilate and contract the ________, thus regulating the amount of light entering the eye.

A) fovea; retina
B) iris; pupil
C) pupil; lens
D) cornea; lens
Question
Which of the following is not true of sensory receptors?

A) They provide the sensory link between the physical sensory world and the brain.
B) They are specialized to detect and respond to one type of sensory stimuli.
C) They transduce sensory stimulito neural impulses.
D) They are located the brain
Question
Which sensory organ provides the most information to the brain?

A) Ear
B) Nose
C) Tongue
D) Eye
Question
If your pupil is quite constricted, you are probably looking at an object

A) in dim lighting.
B) in bright lighting
C) that is very close.
D) that is far away.
Question
The flattening and bulging action of the lens is known as

A) accommodation
B) adjustment
C) dilation
D) assimilation
Question
The process of becoming less sensitive to a stimulus that remains constant over time is known as

A) sensory detection.
B) signal detection.
C) sensory adaptation
D) signal adaptation.
Question
The ________ performs the first step in vision by bending the light rays inward

A) lens cover
B) iris
C) cornea
D) retina
Question
We experience a sensation when

A) a stimulus is sent towards us.
B) the sensory receptor is stimulated.
C) we understand what it is.
D) the appropriate part of the brain is stimulated
Question
Each morning when Jackie goes to work at the dry cleaners, she smells the strong odour of cleaning fluid. After she is there for a few minutes, she is no longer aware of it. What accounts for this?

A) sensory adaptation
B) the just noticeable difference.
C) signal detection theory.
D) transduction.
Question
Visible light is ________ the total electromagnetic spectrum.

A) greater than
B) a small part of
C) equal to
D) a large part of
Question
After working for several hours at a computer terminal and using the word processor to prepare a term paper, the fact that you no longer hear the hum of the computer's electrical system is a result of

A) signal detection.
B) minimum absolute thresholds.
C) difference thresholds.
D) sensory adaptation
Question
What is the transparent structure behind the iris that changes shape as it focuses images on the retina?

A) Blind spot
B) Cornea
C) Lens
D) Pupil
Question
The need for reading glasses or bifocals in middle age is due to the

A) reduced ability of the iris to dilate.
B) reduced ability of the lens to accommodate for far vision.
C) reduced ability of the lens to accommodate for near vision
D) reduced ability of the iris to contract.
Question
The fovea is

A) the periphery of the retina that contains only rods.
B) the area of the retina that contains both rods and cones.
C) the spot where the optic nerve connects to the eye.
D) an area of the retina that contains only cones
Question
If your lens is flattened, you are probably looking at an object

A) in dim lighting.
B) that is far away
C) in bright lighting.
D) that is very close.
Question
Changes in a chemical called _____ found in the rods, enable us to adapt to the darkness of a movie theatre or to the brightness of a beach on a sunny day.

A) serotonin.
B) rhodospin
C) vitrial.
D) GABA.
Question
Which of the following is not true of cones?

A) They play a key role colour vision.
B) They are more numerous than rods
C) They are critical our ability to notice fine detail.
D) They function best bright light.
Question
The reason that the blind spot is not perceived as a black hole in our visual field is

A) the optic nerve connects at the blind spot, and it is where we have the highest concentration of cones and rods.
B) the blind spot doesn't really exist.
C) because we usually have both eyes open, and each eye provides a slightly different view
D) the optic nerve connects at the blind spot and it contains cones to allow us to see colour.
Question
The image on the retina is

A) strongest at the point where the optic nerve exits the eye.
B) upside down and reversed left to right
C) clear even for people who are nearsighted or farsighted.
D) weakest at the fovea.
Question
If your lens is bulging in the centre, you are probably looking at an object

A) that is very far away.
B) in bright lighting.
C) in dim lighting.
D) that is very close
Question
The flattening and bulging action of the lens is known as

A) transduction.
B) accommodation
C) assimilation.
D) opponent-processing.
Question
The retina is about the size of a

A) small postage stamp
B) this typed O.
C) mustard jar lid.
D) quarter.
Question
The name of the condition that occurs in middle age and involves lessened ability of the lens to accommodate is called

A) presbyopia
B) astigmatism.
C) myopia.
D) hyperopia.
Question
The clearest point of your vision in the daytime is

A) at the fovea
B) not located on any particular spot of the retina.
C) at the point where the optic nerve connects with the eye.
D) at the periphery of the retina.
Question
Which of the following is true of the cones?

A) They allow us to see colour
B) They are not very good detecting fine details.
C) They function best dim light.
D) They adapt more readily than rods to the dark.
Question
The condition that occurs when the lens focuses images of distant objects behind, rather than on, the retina is called

A) shortsightedness.
B) farsightedness
C) nearsightedness.
D) presbyopia.
Question
Which of the following is true?

A) You have more rods the fovea and more cones the rest of the retina.
B) You have many more rods than cones
C) You have many more cones than rods.
D) You have about equal numbers of cones than rods.
Question
The condition that occurs when the lens focuses images of distant objects in front of, rather than on, the retina is called

A) shortsightedness.
B) nearsightedness
C) farsightedness.
D) presbyopia.
Question
Which of the following statements is not true?

A) Rods allow us to see very dim light.
B) Cones are the receptors that allow us to see colour.
C) Rods respond to only black and white
D) Cones are the receptors that allow us to see fine detail.
Question
If your pupil is quite large, you are probably looking at an object:

A) that is very close.
B) that is very far away.
C) in bright lighting.
D) in dim lighting
Question
Which of the following is not true of the image on the retina?

A) It is reversed left to right.
B) It is strongest where the optic nerve exits the eye
C) It is strongest at the fovea.
D) It is upside down.
Question
Where the optic nerve exits the eye, there are

A) equal numbers of rods and cones.
B) more cones than rods.
C) neither rods nor cones
D) more rods than cones.
Question
The point at which the optic nerve exits the eye is called the

A) sclera.
B) retina.
C) fovea.
D) blind spot
Question
Hue is to ________ of light as brightness is to ________ of light.

A) wavelength; purity
B) wavelength;intensity
C) intensity; purity
D) wave complexity;intensity
Question
Before light can reach visual receptors in the retina, rods and cones, it must actually pass through all of the following except

A) ganglion cells,
B) amacrine cells
C) vertical cells
D) bipolar cells
Question
Brightness is determined by ________ and hue is determined by ________.

A) wavelength;intensity
B) wavelength; saturation
C) intensity; saturation
D) intensity; wavelength
Question
Which of these statements accurately describes the visual pathway?

A) information from the right half of each eye goes to the right hemisphere and from the left half to the left hemisphere
B) information from the right eye goes to the right hemisphere and from the left eye to the left hemisphere.
C) information from the right eye goes to the left hemisphere and from the left eye to the right hemisphere.
D) information from the right half of each eye goes to the left hemisphere and from the left half to the right hemisphere.
Question
The fovea is located

A) behind the retina.
B) in front of the retina.
C) at the periphery of the retina.
D) in the centre of the retina
Question
Bright light is to ________ as dim light is to ________.

A) bipolar cell; ganglion cell
B) ganglion cell; bipolar cell
C) rod; cone
D) cone; rod
Question
As other wavelengths of light are mixed with another wavelength, we can say the colour becomes

A) purer.
B) moretense.
C) a hue.
D) less saturated
Question
Brightness refers to the

A) purity of the colour we view.
B) intensity of the colour we view
C) saturation of the colour we view.
D) wavelength of the colour we view.
Question
The ophthalmologist is examining a part of your eye in which you have mostly rods. She is looking at which portion of the retina?

A) The periphery
B) The blind spot
C) The fovea
D) The centre
Question
You can find the highest concentration of rods in the

A) centre of the retina.
B) blind spot.
C) periphery of the retina
D) fovea.
Question
Which of the following physical properties of light contribute to your experiences of hue or colour?

A) Wavelength
B) Wave complexity
C) Amplitude
Dtensity
Question
Neural impulses are carried from the retina to the thalamus by the ________ and then relayed to their final destination, the ________.

A) rods and cones; optic nerve
B) optic nerve; optic chiasma
C) optic nerve; primary visual cortex
D) optic chiasma; primary visual cortex
Question
Visual information is carried to the brain by the

A) optic nerve
B) auditory nerve.
C) papillae.
D) hair cells.
Question
About ________ of the primary visual cortex is dedicated exclusively to analyzing input from the fovea, which is a very small but extremely important part of the retina.

A) 10%
B) 25%
C) 50%
D) 100%
Question
Hue refers to the

A) actual colour we view
B) purity of the colour we view.
C) brightness of the colour we view.
D) saturation of the colour we view.
Question
Which of the following statements is not true of the work of Hubel and Weisel?

A) They were able tosert electrodesto single cells the visual cortex's of cats
B) They demonstrated that adjacent neurons can alter the type offormation to which its neighbours are sensitive
C) They discovered that each neuron responds to only one specific type of visual pattern.
D) They discovered feature detectors.
Question
The dimensions of colour that we experience are

A) hue, brightness, and saturation
B) brightness,tensity and hue.
C) purity,tensity and wavelength.
D) hue, wavelength andtensity.
Question
The cones perform better than the rods in each of the following conditions except

A) helping you pick out puzzle pieces with similar detail when you are working on a jigsaw puzzle.
B) helping you see well on a bright, sunny day.
C) helping you find a seat a darkened movie theatre
D) helping you detect subtle colour differences fabric samples.
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Deck 3: Sensation and Perception
1
According to its definition, the absolute threshold is the minimum amount of sensory stimulation that a person can

A) detect at least once ten trials.
B) never detect.
C) detect 50 percent of the time
D) always detect.
detect 50 percent of the time
2
Weber's law best fits people with

A) specialized training.
B) both good abilities and specialized training.
C) average sensitivities
D) exceptionally good abilities.
average sensitivities
3
In psychophysics, JND stands for

A) Jung's noticeable difference.
B) just neural distance.
C) Jung's neural distance.
D) just noticeable difference
just noticeable difference
4
The minimum amount of physical stimulation necessary for us to experience a sensation 50 percent of the time is called the

A) blind spot.
B) difference threshold.
C) figure to ground ratio.
D) absolute threshold
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The process by which sensory receptors convert sensory stimulation into neural impulses is called

A) refraction.
B) convergence.
C) sublimation.
D) transduction
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Weber's law best fits sensory stimuli that are

A) fairly weak.
B) neither very strong nor very weak
C) fairly weak through very strong.
D) very strong.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Detecting a candle 48 kilometres away on a clear, dark night, and tasting a teaspoon of sugar dissolved in 9 litres of water are examples of

A) absolute thresholds
B) difference thresholds.
C) perceptual constancies.
D) transduction.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
________ furnishes the raw material of sensory experience; ________ provides the finished product.

A) Perception; sensation
B) Perception; transduction
C) Sensation; perception
D) Sensation; transduction
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Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The process through which we interpret and organize information brought to us by our various senses is called

A) sensation.
B) somnambulism.
C) convergence.
D) perception
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Which of the following is listed in your textbook as a "secondary sense?"

A) Smell
B) Vision
C) Balance
D) Touch
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Psychologists define the absolute threshold as the minimum amount of sensory stimulation which can be detected

A) 25 percent of the time.
B) 50 percent of the time
C) 75 percent of the time.
D) 100 percent of the time
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The process by which sensory receptors convert sensory stimulation-light, sound, odours, etc.-into neural impulses is

A) transduction
B) stimulus generalization.
C) perception.
D) signal detection.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The discrimination of a stimulus from background noise and the decision that the stimulus is present combine in the view known as

A) top-down processing.
B) just noticeable difference.
C) Weber's Law.
D) signal detection theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The process through which the senses detect sensory stimuli and transmit them to the brain is called

A) perception.
B) reception.
C) consciousness.
D) sensation
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Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Tina was walking through the woods, and she saw something moving. When she came closer to it, she realized the moving animal was a deer. Being able to identify the animal was a product of

A) convergence.
B) perception
C) reception.
D) aphasia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
S.B.'s failure to adapt to vision after fifty years of blindness points out the difference between sensation and

A) dreaming.
B) illusion.
C) perception
D) transduction.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Signal detection theory suggests that deciding whether a stimulus is present depends partly on the ________ and partly on the potential gain or loss associated with deciding that it is present or absent.

A) the strength of the stimulus
B) the focus of your attention
C) probability that the stimulus will occur
D) level of your anxiety
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
"The information brought to us by our various senses" is a description of

A) sensation
B) reception.
C) perception.
D) transduction.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which of the following statements correctly describes our ability to detect differences in stimulus intensity?

A) The amount of change needed to detect differences stimulation is identical for each sense.
B) Larger changes strong stimuli are needed to detect changes than are needed for weak stimuli
C) The same amount of change is needed to detect changes weak stimuli and strong stimuli.
D) Larger changes weak stimuli are needed to detect changes than are needed for strong stimuli.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Sensory information is organized and interpreted by the brain through the process of

A) transduction.
B) consciousness.
C) perception
D) sensation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which of the following is not true with regard to the functioning of the pupils in the eye?

A) Two muscles the iris control pupil size.
B) Pupils help regulate the amount of light admitted to the eye.
C) Pupils can contract to the size of the head of a pin.
D) We can voluntary control pupil contraction
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Transduction refers to

A) the conversion of sensory stimulationto neural impulses by the sensory receptors
B) illusions that result from overgeneralizing from experiences.
C) the process of subliminal perception.
D) hallucinations that occur due to sensory deprivation situations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The amount of light that enters into the eye is controlled by the

A) lens.
B) retina.
C) cornea.
D) iris
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
As light enters the outer surface of the eye, what structure bends the rays of light so that they travel through the pupils?

A) Cornea
B) Lens
C) Iris
D) Retina
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In the eye the information contained in light makes contact with the _________ first; and with the __________ last

A) fovea…lens
B) lens…fovea
C) optic nerve...cornea
D) cornea…optic nerve
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which of the following is the correct order for light as it moves toward the retina?

A) lens, cornea, pupil
B) pupil, lens, cornea
C) cornea, pupil, lens
D) pupil, cornea, lens
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
As we grow older, our lens loses some elasticity-that is, it loses the ability to change its shape to accommodate for near vision, a condition called

A) accommodation failure.
B) myopia.
C) presbyopia
D) anhedonia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The tough, transparent, protective layer covering the front of the eye is called the

A) iris.
B) pupil.
C) lens.
D) cornea
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Sensory stimulation from the external world is converted into neural impulses by the

A) brain.
B) sensory receptors
C) thalamus.
D) sensory glia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The two muscles in the ________ dilate and contract the ________, thus regulating the amount of light entering the eye.

A) fovea; retina
B) iris; pupil
C) pupil; lens
D) cornea; lens
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which of the following is not true of sensory receptors?

A) They provide the sensory link between the physical sensory world and the brain.
B) They are specialized to detect and respond to one type of sensory stimuli.
C) They transduce sensory stimulito neural impulses.
D) They are located the brain
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Which sensory organ provides the most information to the brain?

A) Ear
B) Nose
C) Tongue
D) Eye
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
If your pupil is quite constricted, you are probably looking at an object

A) in dim lighting.
B) in bright lighting
C) that is very close.
D) that is far away.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The flattening and bulging action of the lens is known as

A) accommodation
B) adjustment
C) dilation
D) assimilation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The process of becoming less sensitive to a stimulus that remains constant over time is known as

A) sensory detection.
B) signal detection.
C) sensory adaptation
D) signal adaptation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The ________ performs the first step in vision by bending the light rays inward

A) lens cover
B) iris
C) cornea
D) retina
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
We experience a sensation when

A) a stimulus is sent towards us.
B) the sensory receptor is stimulated.
C) we understand what it is.
D) the appropriate part of the brain is stimulated
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Each morning when Jackie goes to work at the dry cleaners, she smells the strong odour of cleaning fluid. After she is there for a few minutes, she is no longer aware of it. What accounts for this?

A) sensory adaptation
B) the just noticeable difference.
C) signal detection theory.
D) transduction.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Visible light is ________ the total electromagnetic spectrum.

A) greater than
B) a small part of
C) equal to
D) a large part of
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
After working for several hours at a computer terminal and using the word processor to prepare a term paper, the fact that you no longer hear the hum of the computer's electrical system is a result of

A) signal detection.
B) minimum absolute thresholds.
C) difference thresholds.
D) sensory adaptation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
What is the transparent structure behind the iris that changes shape as it focuses images on the retina?

A) Blind spot
B) Cornea
C) Lens
D) Pupil
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42
The need for reading glasses or bifocals in middle age is due to the

A) reduced ability of the iris to dilate.
B) reduced ability of the lens to accommodate for far vision.
C) reduced ability of the lens to accommodate for near vision
D) reduced ability of the iris to contract.
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43
The fovea is

A) the periphery of the retina that contains only rods.
B) the area of the retina that contains both rods and cones.
C) the spot where the optic nerve connects to the eye.
D) an area of the retina that contains only cones
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44
If your lens is flattened, you are probably looking at an object

A) in dim lighting.
B) that is far away
C) in bright lighting.
D) that is very close.
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45
Changes in a chemical called _____ found in the rods, enable us to adapt to the darkness of a movie theatre or to the brightness of a beach on a sunny day.

A) serotonin.
B) rhodospin
C) vitrial.
D) GABA.
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46
Which of the following is not true of cones?

A) They play a key role colour vision.
B) They are more numerous than rods
C) They are critical our ability to notice fine detail.
D) They function best bright light.
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47
The reason that the blind spot is not perceived as a black hole in our visual field is

A) the optic nerve connects at the blind spot, and it is where we have the highest concentration of cones and rods.
B) the blind spot doesn't really exist.
C) because we usually have both eyes open, and each eye provides a slightly different view
D) the optic nerve connects at the blind spot and it contains cones to allow us to see colour.
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48
The image on the retina is

A) strongest at the point where the optic nerve exits the eye.
B) upside down and reversed left to right
C) clear even for people who are nearsighted or farsighted.
D) weakest at the fovea.
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49
If your lens is bulging in the centre, you are probably looking at an object

A) that is very far away.
B) in bright lighting.
C) in dim lighting.
D) that is very close
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50
The flattening and bulging action of the lens is known as

A) transduction.
B) accommodation
C) assimilation.
D) opponent-processing.
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51
The retina is about the size of a

A) small postage stamp
B) this typed O.
C) mustard jar lid.
D) quarter.
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52
The name of the condition that occurs in middle age and involves lessened ability of the lens to accommodate is called

A) presbyopia
B) astigmatism.
C) myopia.
D) hyperopia.
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53
The clearest point of your vision in the daytime is

A) at the fovea
B) not located on any particular spot of the retina.
C) at the point where the optic nerve connects with the eye.
D) at the periphery of the retina.
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54
Which of the following is true of the cones?

A) They allow us to see colour
B) They are not very good detecting fine details.
C) They function best dim light.
D) They adapt more readily than rods to the dark.
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55
The condition that occurs when the lens focuses images of distant objects behind, rather than on, the retina is called

A) shortsightedness.
B) farsightedness
C) nearsightedness.
D) presbyopia.
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56
Which of the following is true?

A) You have more rods the fovea and more cones the rest of the retina.
B) You have many more rods than cones
C) You have many more cones than rods.
D) You have about equal numbers of cones than rods.
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57
The condition that occurs when the lens focuses images of distant objects in front of, rather than on, the retina is called

A) shortsightedness.
B) nearsightedness
C) farsightedness.
D) presbyopia.
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58
Which of the following statements is not true?

A) Rods allow us to see very dim light.
B) Cones are the receptors that allow us to see colour.
C) Rods respond to only black and white
D) Cones are the receptors that allow us to see fine detail.
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59
If your pupil is quite large, you are probably looking at an object:

A) that is very close.
B) that is very far away.
C) in bright lighting.
D) in dim lighting
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60
Which of the following is not true of the image on the retina?

A) It is reversed left to right.
B) It is strongest where the optic nerve exits the eye
C) It is strongest at the fovea.
D) It is upside down.
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61
Where the optic nerve exits the eye, there are

A) equal numbers of rods and cones.
B) more cones than rods.
C) neither rods nor cones
D) more rods than cones.
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62
The point at which the optic nerve exits the eye is called the

A) sclera.
B) retina.
C) fovea.
D) blind spot
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63
Hue is to ________ of light as brightness is to ________ of light.

A) wavelength; purity
B) wavelength;intensity
C) intensity; purity
D) wave complexity;intensity
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64
Before light can reach visual receptors in the retina, rods and cones, it must actually pass through all of the following except

A) ganglion cells,
B) amacrine cells
C) vertical cells
D) bipolar cells
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65
Brightness is determined by ________ and hue is determined by ________.

A) wavelength;intensity
B) wavelength; saturation
C) intensity; saturation
D) intensity; wavelength
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66
Which of these statements accurately describes the visual pathway?

A) information from the right half of each eye goes to the right hemisphere and from the left half to the left hemisphere
B) information from the right eye goes to the right hemisphere and from the left eye to the left hemisphere.
C) information from the right eye goes to the left hemisphere and from the left eye to the right hemisphere.
D) information from the right half of each eye goes to the left hemisphere and from the left half to the right hemisphere.
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67
The fovea is located

A) behind the retina.
B) in front of the retina.
C) at the periphery of the retina.
D) in the centre of the retina
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68
Bright light is to ________ as dim light is to ________.

A) bipolar cell; ganglion cell
B) ganglion cell; bipolar cell
C) rod; cone
D) cone; rod
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69
As other wavelengths of light are mixed with another wavelength, we can say the colour becomes

A) purer.
B) moretense.
C) a hue.
D) less saturated
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70
Brightness refers to the

A) purity of the colour we view.
B) intensity of the colour we view
C) saturation of the colour we view.
D) wavelength of the colour we view.
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71
The ophthalmologist is examining a part of your eye in which you have mostly rods. She is looking at which portion of the retina?

A) The periphery
B) The blind spot
C) The fovea
D) The centre
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72
You can find the highest concentration of rods in the

A) centre of the retina.
B) blind spot.
C) periphery of the retina
D) fovea.
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73
Which of the following physical properties of light contribute to your experiences of hue or colour?

A) Wavelength
B) Wave complexity
C) Amplitude
Dtensity
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74
Neural impulses are carried from the retina to the thalamus by the ________ and then relayed to their final destination, the ________.

A) rods and cones; optic nerve
B) optic nerve; optic chiasma
C) optic nerve; primary visual cortex
D) optic chiasma; primary visual cortex
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75
Visual information is carried to the brain by the

A) optic nerve
B) auditory nerve.
C) papillae.
D) hair cells.
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76
About ________ of the primary visual cortex is dedicated exclusively to analyzing input from the fovea, which is a very small but extremely important part of the retina.

A) 10%
B) 25%
C) 50%
D) 100%
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77
Hue refers to the

A) actual colour we view
B) purity of the colour we view.
C) brightness of the colour we view.
D) saturation of the colour we view.
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78
Which of the following statements is not true of the work of Hubel and Weisel?

A) They were able tosert electrodesto single cells the visual cortex's of cats
B) They demonstrated that adjacent neurons can alter the type offormation to which its neighbours are sensitive
C) They discovered that each neuron responds to only one specific type of visual pattern.
D) They discovered feature detectors.
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79
The dimensions of colour that we experience are

A) hue, brightness, and saturation
B) brightness,tensity and hue.
C) purity,tensity and wavelength.
D) hue, wavelength andtensity.
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80
The cones perform better than the rods in each of the following conditions except

A) helping you pick out puzzle pieces with similar detail when you are working on a jigsaw puzzle.
B) helping you see well on a bright, sunny day.
C) helping you find a seat a darkened movie theatre
D) helping you detect subtle colour differences fabric samples.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 303 flashcards in this deck.