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Psych 1XX3
Psych 1XX3 Final Exam
203
Psychology
Undergraduate 1
04/22/2010

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Cards

Term
What is visual acuity?
Definition
How close to an object you need to be to see it.
Term
What is your scotoma and what is another name for it?
Definition
blindspot, optic disc
Term
What is agnosia?
Definition
When a blind person has intact perceptual judgements.
Term
What can transcranial magnetic stimulation do?
Definition
It can legion the brain temporarily.
Term
What is amplitude?
Definition
Height of a sound/light wave.
Higher = brighter/louder
Term
What is purity?
Definition
Purity => richness of colour
Term
What is timbre?
Definition
Timbre => complexity of a sound
Term
What is wavelength?
Definition
Distance between peaks of light waves.
*high(long distance) wavelength = low frequency
*shortest(humans)= 360 nanometers(violet)
*longest(humans) = 750 nanometers(red)
Term
What is frequency?
Definition
# of times in a sec a wave makes one cycle from one peak to the next
*high frequency = high pitched sound
Term
What is the order in which light is focused?
Definition
cornea -> pupil -> lens
Term
What happens to the pupil if there is too much light?
Definition
It constricts or becomes tiny.
Term
What does the lens do to images?
Definition
It causes them to land on the retina upside down and reversed from left to right.
Term
What is accomodation?
Definition
It is the changes in the shape of lens. It's only effective for 2 meters.
Term
What do photoreceptors do?
Definition
They transform light into neural signals that the brain can read.
Term
What happens to the shape of the lens if an object is far?
Definition
It becomes elongated.
Term
What happens to the shape of the lens if an object is close?
Definition
It becomes rounder(fatter).
Term
What controls the size of the pupil?
Definition
The iris.
Term
What happens to the pupil if there is too little light?
Definition
It dilates or becomes bigger.
Term
What is action blindsight?
Definition
It is when a blind person can see the location of objects or types of movement.
Term
What is attention blindsight?
Definition
When a blind person can see that something has moved.
Term
What is fundamental tone in regards to timbre?
Definition
When a sound vibrates as a whole.
Term
What is overtone in regards to timbre?
Definition
When a sound vibrates in shorter segments.
Term
What is saturated light?
Definition
Saturated light is pure and it only includes one wavelength.
Term
What is desaturated light?
Definition
Desaturated light is white and it includes many wavelengths.
Term
What are cones?
Definition
Cones are used for day vision and they have good visual acuity.
Term
What do you use when you're staring straight at something? Rods or cones?
Definition
Cones.
Term
Where don't cones work?
Definition
They don't work in dim environments.
Term
What are rods?
Definition
Rods are used for night vision and they have poor visual acuity.
Term
What do you use when staring to one side? rods or cones?
Definition
Rods.
Term
What is dark adaptaion?
Definition
You're eyes need time to get used to the dark because there are few photopigments ready to react to light.
Term
What happens to photopigments when light is absorbed?
Definition
They are split and then recombined.
Term
What happens to photopigments after they are recombined?
Definition
There is a brief period of time where they can't react to light.
Term
What happens when photopigments are exposed to bright light?
Definition
The rate of splitting exceeds recombining which leaves you blind.
Term
How many photopigments are there for each photoreceptors?
Definition
There are 4(1 for rods, 3 for cones)
Term
What happens when light hits the center of the receptive field?
Definition
The cell is excited and there is an increasing in firing of the cell.
Term
What happens when light hits the surrounding area of the receptive field?
Definition
The cell is inhibited and there is an decrease in firing of the cell.
Term
What happens when light hits both the center and surround of the receptive field?
Definition
It cancels out and the cell fires at normal.
Term
What is lateral inhibition?
Definition
When a light is stimulated by light it sends signals to brain as well as to neighbouring cells which inhibits their activation and makes the edges easier to detect.
Term
What is the optic chiasm?
Definition
It's where the optic nerves from the inside half of each eye crosses over to the opposite.
Term
What does the right side of the optic chiasm control?
Definition
It controls the inner right and outer left vision fields.
Term
What does the left side of the optic chiasm control?
Definition
It controls the inner left and outer right vision fields.
Term
What does the 2nd pathway involving the superior colliculus do?
Definition
It coordinates vision with other senses, localizes objects and helps to guide movements.
Term
What is the first(main) pathway of vision?
Definition
It is the LGN to the visual cortex.
Term
What does the magnocellular pathway/cells do?
Definition
It processes movement information
Term
What does the parvocellular pathway/cells do?
Definition
It processes colour and form information.
Term
How are the 6 LGN layers organized?
Definition
They are organized equally for each eye, 3 each. They are organized 4 for parvocellular, 2 for magnocellular.
Term
How is V1 organized?
Definition
It is organized topographically, neighbouring locations in the retina project to neghbouring locations in V1.
Term
What is the dorsal stream?
Definition
It's the 'where' stream. It processes location of sound as well as depth, motion and location of visual objects.
Term
What is the ventral stream?
Definition
It is the 'what' stream. It processes sound recognition as well as colour and form of visual objects.
Term
What type of eyes do worms and jellyfish have?
Definition
They have a light sensitive patch.
Term
What do curved(cup) eyes have?
Definition
They have direction detection.
Term
What do crude lens have?
Definition
They have focusing, accomodation and visual input from different species.
Term
What are compound eyes?
Definition
They are eyes that have many signals put together from each ommatidum. It can detect movement at close distances.
Term
What cost is there to having an eye?
Definition
There is the growing and maintaining.
Term
What are the advantages of having an eye?
Definition
avoid predators, easy to find food, shelter and mate
Term
How does the brightness of slit pupils compare to circular?
Definition
Slit pupils are 10x brighter.
Term
Why would an animal have vertically slit pupils?
Definition
If they needed to know what was happening above or below them.
Term
Why would an animal have horizontally slit pupils?
Definition
If they needed to know what was happening on the horizon.
Term
What does a wider daylight pupil do?
Definition
It improves sensitivity.
Term
What do narrower photoreceptors do?
Definition
They give more detail of the image.
Term
What does the built-in optic trick that hawks have do?
Definition
It magnifies the image.
Term
What do laterally directed eyes have?
Definition
They have 2 separate fields of view and poor depth perception.
Term
What do front facing eyes have?
Definition
They have narrow fields of view and good depth perception.
Term
What has to happen for eyes to become fully functional?
Definition
They have to be used.
Term
When are eyes formed?
Definition
They are formed at second month of prenatal(fetus).
Term
What happens to eyes at 6 month of prenatal?
Definition
They begin to react to light and there is random firing of cells.
Term
What happens to an infant's eyes at 3 months ?
Definition
It has adult-like focus.
Term
What happens to a child's eyes at 4 years?
Definition
It has adult-like retinal cells.
Term
What happens to a child's eyes at 11 years?
Definition
The eye have reached it's mature state.
Term
When do children reach adult acuity?
Definition
They reach it at 4-6 years.
Term
How does a newborn's visual acuity compare to an adult's visual acuity?
Definition
Newborns can see at 20ft what adults can see at 600ft.
Term
How does a 6 month's visual acuity compare to an adult's visual acuity?
Definition
Newborns can see at 20ft what adults can see at 100ft.
Term
What is colour?
Definition
Surfaces reflect certain wavelengths that trigger patterns of response in our brains.
Term
What species of animals have colour vision?
Definition
birds, fish, reptiles, insects and primates
Term
What species of animals can see colours that humans can't?
Definition
birds, fish, insects
Term
What are nectar maps?
Definition
Nectar maps are patterns that some flowers have that only bees have.
Term
What are primary colours?
Definition
The 3 colours that can make every colour in the visual spectrum.(red, blue, yellow)
Term
What is subtractive colour mixing?
Definition
It's when some wavelengths are absorbed and others are reflected. Ex. to see blue every wavelength is being absorbed except blue.
Term
What is additive colour mixing?
Definition
Coloured lights add their wavelength to the mixture as opposed to subtracting.
Term
What is the trichromatic theory?
Definition
3 cones/receptors(red, blue, green) that are each sensitive to different wavelengths of light.
Term
What is the opponent-process theory?
Definition
Each colour receptor is made up of a pair of opponent colour processes and can only be in one of two states.(blue-yellow/green-red/bright-dim)
Term
What is afterimage?
Definition
It is when you stare at a neutral colour for a period of time and then stare somewhere else and you will see it's complementary colour.
Term
What is considered high resolution?
Definition
When one cone is transmitting to one ganglion cell and there is a small receptive field.
Term
What is considered low resolution?
Definition
When many cones are being transmitted to one ganglion cell and there is a large receptive field.
Term
What do CO blobs respond to and what do their receptive fields look like?
Definition
CO blobs respond only to colour and their receptive fields are the same as cells.
Term
What causes colour blindness?
Definition
It is caused by injury to colour detecting regions.
Term
What is protanopia?
Definition
It is when an individual has no red cone which makes them red-green colour blind.
Term
What is deuteranopia?
Definition
It is when an individual has no green cone which makes them red-green colour blind.
Term
What is tritanopia?
Definition
It is when an individual has no blue cone which makes them blue-yellow colour blind.
Term
What are the two binocular cues?
Definition
convergence and retinal disparity
Term
What is convergence?
Definition
Our eyes turn inwards to fixate on a point. It doesn't work if the object is too far away.
Term
What is retinal disparity with regards to binocular cues?
Definition
Seeing two different scenes with each eye.
Term
What are the two motion cues?
Definition
motion parallax and optic flow
Term
What is motion parallax?
Definition
Objects are close speed by faster than objects farther away.
Term
What is optic flow?
Definition
Objects closer move and change more in size than objects farther away.
Term
What are the 6 pictorial cues?
Definition
interposition, relative size, linear perspective, aerial perspective, shading and elevation
Term
What is interposition?
Definition
When an object blocks another it is perceived as being infront.
Term
What is relative size?
Definition
When two objects are the same shape, the larger one will seem closer.
Term
What is linear perspective?
Definition
Something is parallel but it appears to converge at a single point on the horizon.
Term
What is aerial perspective?
Definition
Objects farther away have fewer details. Also called texture and haze.
Term
What is shading?
Definition
Tells us what part of the object is close.
Term
What is elevation?
Definition
How far away an object is by how close it is to the horizon.(closer = farther away)
Term
What type of eyes do prey have?
Definition
Side facing eyes.
Term
What cues do side facing eyes provide?
Definition
Only monocular cues.
Term
What type of eyes do predators have?
Definition
Front facing eyes.
Term
What cues do front facing eyes provide?
Definition
Both binocular and monocular cues.
Term
What does retinal disparity do?
Definition
Groups together features/objects that are at the same distance. It allows us to detect camouflage.
Term
What does the visual cliff experiment prove?
Definition
Infants at least 6 months can perceive depth and avoid it.
Term
What is motion agnosia?
Definition
When objects are not moving but frozen, they just jump from one place to another.
Term
What is the Gestalt Philosophy?
Definition
People tend to perceive the whole rather than the putting together its parts.
Term
What is meant by the Gestalt Principle figure-ground?
Definition
What is the object and what is the background in response to visual stimuli. What sound are you paying attention to(figure) and what sound are you not focusing on(ground).
Term
What is meant by the Gestalt Principle proximity?
Definition
Objects or sounds closer together belong together. Play 2 separate tones, you would hear a single tone.
Term
What is meant by the Gestalt Principle similarity?
Definition
Group elements that have similar qualities.
Term
What is meant by the Gestalt Principle closure?
Definition
If there are gaps in a shape/sound, you fill them in.
Term
What is meant by the Gestalt Principle continuity?
Definition
Perceiving a simple, continuous shape or being able to follow one sound, despite conflicting sounds.
Term
What is meant by the Gestalt Principle common fate?
Definition
Things that change in the same way should be grouped together.
Term
What type of processing bases object recognition on the features of the object?
Definition
Bottom-up processing.
Term
What type of processing bases object recognition on your beliefs?
Definition
Top-down processing.
Term
What is Biederman's geon theory?
Definition
We have 36 geons(geometrical shapes stored in memory and when we see an object we compare it to those shapes.
Term
What is the Template theory?
Definition
We store many templates and compare objects to all templates in memory.
Term
What is perceptual constancy?
Definition
We see an object as unchanging even if it is changing.
Term
What is shape constancy?
Definition
Objects have a constant shape even if our point of view changes.
Term
What is location constancy?
Definition
Objects are constantly moving despite looking stationary.
Term
What is size constancy?
Definition
Size of an object is unchanging even though they vary in distance.
Term
What is brightness constancy?
Definition
Brightness of an object doesn't change even if lighting changes.
Term
What is colour constancy?
Definition
Objects have a constant colour even if light changes.
Term
How do frogs catch insects?
Definition
They have bug detectors that respond only to moving black dots.
Term
What do simple cell feature detectors respond to?
Definition
Length and orientation in a particular region of the retina.
Term
What do complex cell feature detectors respond to?
Definition
Length and orientation anywhere in the receptive field.
Term
What do hypercomplex cell feature detectors respond to?
Definition
Orientation that ends at specific points in the receptive field.
Term
What is keyhole vision?
Definition
When you lose vision in some parts of your visual field but the parts that you do see will seem normal.
Term
What is visual agnosia?
Definition
You can see everything but you don't know what anything is.
Term
What is object agnosia?
Definition
When you are unable to identify different objects by sight but you can by touch.
Term
What is prosopagnosia?
Definition
You can't recognize who's face it is but you see the features and know it's a face.
Term
What frequencies can humans hear?
Definition
Between 20Hz - 20,000Hz.
Term
How are sounds processed along the basilar membrane?
Definition
Sounds of different frequencies are processed along different areas.
Term
What does a longer basilar membrane equal?
Definition
A higher range of frequencies.
Term
What does the pinna do?
Definition
Collects sound waves and directs them along the ear canal.
Term
What does the ear canal do to sound?
Definition
It amplifies sound waves.
Term
What does the eardrum do?
Definition
It vibrate at the frequency of the sound wave.
Term
What are the three ossicles and what do they do?
Definition
hammer, anvil, stirrup. They amplify signal sent to the oval window.
Term
What does the cochlea do?
Definition
It transfers changes in fluid into neural impulses that the brain can understand.
Term
What does the oval window do when vibrated?
Definition
It causes the fluid in the cochlea to be displaced.
Term
What does the round window do?
Definition
It bulges in and out when the fluid is displaced.
Term
Which end of the basilar membrane vibrates to a high frequency?
Definition
End near oval window.
Term
Which end of the basilar membrane vibrates to a low frequency?
Definition
End near round window.
Term
How many axons does one inner hair cell connect to?
Definition
One connects to 20 axons.
Term
What type of hair cell is fast?
Definition
Inner hair cells.
Term
What type of hair cell is slow?
Definition
Outer hair cells.
Term
How many outer hair cells connect to on axon?
Definition
30 connect to one axon.
Term
What are the two auditory localization cues?
Definition
Intensity differences and time differences.
Term
When would an echo return for an object that is close?
Definition
It will return sooner than objects farther away.
Term
What would a returning echo look like for an object that is moving?
Definition
It would be doppler-shifted.
Term
What return time would a textured object have?
Definition
It would have echoes that vary in return time.
Term
What is co-evolution?
Definition
It's when the evolution of traits of one species affect the evolution of traits of another.
Term
What is the frequency theory?
Definition
Vibration of the entire basilar at the frequency of the incoming sound wave allows the brain to decipher frequency by counting the neural impulses.
Term
What is the volley principle?
Definition
Groups of nerve fibres can fire as a team to signal to the brain the frequency of sound waves up to 5000Hz.
Term
What is the place theory?
Definition
The brain can decipher the frequency of the sound wave by being tuned to the specific place of the peak of its travelling wave along the basilar membrane.
Term
What is bird song?
Definition
Music-like vocalizations made by male birds to attract or defend.
Term
What are the bird song areas?
Definition
The HVC and the RA.
Term
What would happen to a female bird if she is given testosterone?
Definition
She will have an increase in the bird song areas and begin to sing.
Term
Will birds in isolation learn their own species' bird song?
Definition
Yes.
Term
When do baby birds get exposed to bird song?
Definition
Summer.
Term
What's the development order of bird song?
Definition
Subsong, plastic song, crystallized song.
Term
What is subsong?
Definition
It's baby talk for birds.
Term
What is plastic song?
Definition
When bird song is recognizable as belonging to its own species.
Term
What is crystallized song?
Definition
When the bird song is perfect.
Term
What is the template model of song learning?
Definition
Songbirds inherit a rough template and a sensitive period in which they must practice the song to refine the template in memory.
Term
What is an infant's music perception at 2/3 months of age?
Definition
They are able to notice tempo changes.
Term
What is an infant's music perception at 7 months?
Definition
They can recognize full passages.
Term
What part of the body monitors glucose and glycogen levels?
Definition
The Liver.
Term
What is glucose stored as in the liver?
Definition
Glycogen.
Term
What are high levels of NPY associated with?
Definition
Increased appetite and food seeking behaviours.
Term
What does low glucose and low glycogen levels signal?
Definition
Hunger.
Term
What is CCK responsible for and is it short term or long term?
Definition
It's responsible for feelings of fullness after a meal, short term.
Term
What has more energy than glycogen?
Definition
Fat.
Term
What is leptin?
Definition
It reduces appetite when there is a high level of NPY. At a certain point though it stops inhibiting NPY.
Term
Will obese mice with normal leptin levels lose weight if given leptin?
Definition
No.
Term
What do bitter, sour tastes represent?
Definition
Possibly toxic or noxious foods.
Term
What do sweet tastes represent?
Definition
Rich in sugars/energy and safe to eat.
Term
What do salty tastes represent?
Definition
Rich in protein and identify electrolytes.
Term
What do umami tastes represent?
Definition
Glutamate and aspartate.
Term
What shape our taste preferences?
Definition
Local food availability and cultural influences.
Term
Do high sensitive tasters have more taste buds?
Definition
Yes.
Term
What influences flavour?
Definition
Taste and smell.
Term
What do taste receptors do?
Definition
They detect and respond to food.
Term
What do haptic touch receptors feel?
Definition
Fine touch or pressure from hair.
Term
What do nociceptive touch receptors feel?
Definition
Pain from mechanical, chemical or temperature.
Term
What do proprioceptive touch receptors feel?
Definition
Touch from other parts of the body, muscles.
Term
What do fast adapting touch receptors signal?
Definition
When stimulation has started and ended.
Term
What do slow adapting touch receptors signal?
Definition
Stimulation duration.
Term
What are the 2 pain receptors called?
Definition
A-delta and C-fiber.
Term
What type of pain do A-delta pain receptors signal?
Definition
Immediate sharp pain. Travel up the axon faster.
Term
What type of pain do C-fiber pain receptors signal?
Definition
Chronic pain, likely until the wound has healed. Travels up the axon slower.
Term
How does touch travel up the spinal cord?
Definition
It travels up the side the touch originates from and then crosses over at the brainstem.
Term
How does pain travel up the spinal cord?
Definition
It immediately travels up to the opposite side of the spinal cord and then travels up.
Term
What is synaesthesia?
Definition
It is evolved sensory functions.
Term
What is the first theory of why some people have synaesthesia?
Definition
Lack of pruning of neural connections.
Term
What is the second theory of why some people have synaesthesia?
Definition
We have extra neural connections but we have inhibitory processes that stop it.
Term
What is time space synaesthesia?
Definition
When people can see a calendar infront of them and can flip through it.
Term
What is sound-taste synaesthesia?
Definition
When someone hears a sound and can immediately taste something.
Term
What is colour synaesthesia?
Definition
When someone can see something in colour even if it's not.
Term
What are some traits of synaesthesia?
Definition
Automatic, consistent, emotional responses, spatially extended(not imagined).
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