Transduction - the transference of incoming signals to neural impulses, Sensory adaptation - decreasing responsiveness to a stimuli due to constant stimuli., Sensory habituation (perceptual adaptation) - Our perception of sensation is partially determined by how focused we are on them, Cocktail Party Phenomenon - if you are talking to someone and you hear you name spoken across the room you will switch attention to it, Sensation - activation of sight smell hearing touch or taste, Cornea - protective covering on the front of the eyes, Pupil - opening in the center of the eyes, Lens - focuses light that enters the pupil, Retina - like a screen on the back of your eyes, Feature detection - groups of neurons in the visual cortex respond to different types of visual images such as vertical lines, curves and motion, Optic nerve - nerve leading from the retina that carries impulses to the occipital lobe of the brain, Visbible light - wavelength of radiant energy that humans perceive as sight where different wavelengths are perceived as different colors, Rods - neurons that provide black and white vision, Cones - neurons that provide color vision, Fovea - indentation in the center of the retina where cones are concentrated, Blind spot - the spot on the retina where the optic nerve leaves the retina and there are no rods or cones, Trichromatic theory - a theory of color vision that says that we have three types of cones - red, blue, and green in the retina, Dichromatic color blindness - cannot see either red / green or blue /yellow shades, Monochromatic color blindness - can see only shades of gray, Afterimages - if you stare at a red image for a while and then if you look at a blank page you will see a green image because your receptors for red are fatigued, Opponent-process theory - theory of color vision that says that sensory receptors in the retina come in red / green, blue / yellow / or black / white pairs and if one is stimulated its pair is inhibited from firing, Sound waves - vibrations in the air that are collected by our ears, Amplitude - height of sound waves that determines loudness and is measured in decibels, Frequency - length of sound waves that determines pitch and is measured in megahertzof sound waves that determines loudness and is measured in decibel, Gate-control theory - explains how we experience pain and how some pain messages have a higher priority than others and also how endorphins swing the gate shut on pain, Gustation (taste) - chemical sense that responds to four different types of chemicals sweet, salty, sour, bitter, Olfaction - sense of smell, Vestibular sense - sense that tells us how our body is oriented in space by using three semicircular canals in the ear, Kinesthetic sense - receptors in our muscles and joints give us feedback about the position and orientation of specific body parts, Inattentional blindness - the failure to notice a fully-visible, but unexpected stimulus because attention is engaged on another task,
0%
Sensation Vocab
共有
Kelseynoland
さんの投稿です
11th Grade
12th Grade
Psychology
コンテンツの編集
埋め込み
もっと見る
リーダーボード
もっと表示する
表示を少なくする
このリーダーボードは現在非公開です。公開するには
共有
をクリックしてください。
このリーダーボードは、リソースの所有者によって無効にされています。
このリーダーボードは、あなたのオプションがリソースオーナーと異なるため、無効になっています。
オプションを元に戻す
マッチアップ
は自由形式のテンプレートです。リーダーボード用のスコアは生成されません。
ログインが必要です
表示スタイル
フォント
サブスクリプションが必要です
オプション
テンプレートを切り替える
すべてを表示
アクティビティを再生すると、より多くのフォーマットが表示されます。
オープン結果
リンクをコピー
QRコード
削除
自動保存:
を復元しますか?