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Sensation
Detecting sensory input from the environment.
Perception
Organizing and interpreting sensory information into meaningful experiences.
Absolute threshold
The minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time.
Difference threshold
The smallest change needed to detect a difference between two stimuli.
Sensory adaptation
Reduced sensitivity to constant or unchanging stimuli.
Color constancy
Perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color under changing lighting.
Bottom-up processing
Processing that starts with raw sensory input and builds upward.
Top-down processing
Processing guided by experience, expectations, and knowledge.
Monocular depth cues
Depth cues needing one eye, like linear perspective and relative size.
Binocular depth cues
Depth cues needing both eyes, such as retinal disparity and convergence.
Gestalt principles
Brain rules that organize visual input into meaningful wholes.
Gestalt principle of proximity
We group nearby items together.
Principle of similarity
We group similar-looking items together.
Principle of continuity
We see smooth, continuous patterns instead of breaks.
Closure
Filling in gaps to complete a whole object.
Transduction
Conversion of external energy into neural signals.
Blind spot
A spot with no receptors where the optic nerve exits the eye.
Size constancy
Recognition that an object remains the same size despite distance changes.
Perceptual set
A mental predisposition to interpret stimuli a certain way.
Developmental psychology
Study of how people grow and change throughout life.
Maturation
Biological growth that enables change.
Pruning
Elimination of unused neural connections.
Schema
Mental framework that organizes knowledge.
Assimilation
Fitting new information into existing schemas.
Accommodation
Adjusting schemas when new information does not fit.
Sensorimotor stage
Learning through senses/actions; object permanence develops.
Object permanence
Knowing objects continue to exist even when unseen.
Preoperational stage
Symbolic thinking but lacking logic and conservation.
Egocentrism
Difficulty seeing things from another person's perspective.
Concrete operational stage
Logical thinking develops; conservation understood.
Formal operational stage
Abstract and hypothetical reasoning emerges.
Attachment
Emotional bond that promotes closeness and protection.
Secure attachment
Securely attached children show healthier trust and relationships later in life.
Avoidant attachment
Difficulty with closeness and conflict in relationships later.
Anxious attachment
Clinginess and high reassurance-seeking in relationships.
Harlow's monkey study
Comfort is more important than food in attachment.
Authoritarian parenting
Strict rules, low warmth; leads to lower confidence and higher anxiety.
Authoritative parenting
Warm with rules; leads to independence and strong skills.
Permissive parenting
Few rules; leads to impulsivity and low self-control.
Uninvolved parenting
Neglectful; leads to poor social and academic outcomes.
Theory of mind
Understanding that others have different beliefs and intentions.
Preconventional morality
Avoid punishment or gain rewards.
Conventional morality
Uphold laws and gain approval.
Postconventional morality
Guided by ethical principles and human rights.
Identity vs role confusion stage
Teens explore identity and may struggle with belonging.
Delayed gratification
Waiting for a better reward.
Teratogens
Harmful prenatal exposure such as alcohol, drugs, or viruses.
Puberty
Developmental period of sexual maturation.
Intrinsic motivation
Doing something because you enjoy it.
Extrinsic motivation
Doing something for external rewards.
Difference between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
Internal satisfaction vs. outside incentives.
Broca's area damage
Broken or halted speech; trouble producing words.
Wernicke's area damage
Fluent but nonsensical speech; poor understanding.
Early childhood language learning
Brain is more receptive before age 7.
Twin and adoption studies on intelligence
Genes and environment both influence intelligence.
Algorithm
Step-by-step method that guarantees a solution.
Heuristic
Quick shortcut strategy that is less accurate.
Prototype
Best example of a category.
Availability heuristic
Judging likelihood by what comes to mind easily.
Example of availability heuristic
Overestimating airplane danger after news stories.
Representativeness heuristic
Judging based on stereotypes.
Framing effect
Decision changes depending on wording.
Framing in advertising
Positive wording increases persuasion.
Confirmation bias
Seeking information that supports beliefs.
Confirmation bias in news interpretation
People trust only stories matching their beliefs.
Counterfactual thinking
Imagining 'what might have been.'
Overconfidence
Being more certain than correct.
Belief perseverance
Clinging to beliefs despite evidence.
Nudging
Altering choices by changing how options are presented.
Stereotype threat
Fear of confirming a stereotype hurting performance.
Example of stereotype threat
Girls scoring lower in math after stereotypes are mentioned.
Unconscious bias
Automatic preferences influencing decisions unconsciously.
Résumé study findings
'John' rated more competent than 'Jennifer' on identical résumés.
Awareness of biases
Biases operate automatically and unconsciously.
Intuition in thinking
Enables fast judgments based on experience.
Risks of intuition
Can lead to errors from mental shortcuts.
Algorithms vs heuristics
Algorithms are guaranteed but slow; heuristics are fast but flawed.
Creativity in problem-solving
Leads to new and useful ideas.
Sex in psychology
Biological traits like chromosomes and anatomy.
Gender in psychology
Social and psychological roles and identity.
Distinction between sex and gender
To separate biological traits from social influences.
Gender identity
Internal sense of male, female, both, or neither.
Cisgender
Gender identity matches birth-assigned sex.
Transgender
Gender identity differs from birth-assigned sex.
Differences in transgender experiences
Transgender people face more discrimination and social challenges.
Gender roles
Society's expectations for masculine and feminine behavior.
Cultural norms and gender roles
Modeling, reinforcement, and media teach role expectations.
Social learning and gender
Children imitate and are rewarded for gender-typed behavior.
Y chromosome role in development
Triggers testes development at about 7 weeks.
Hormones and gendered development
Shape physical traits and brain patterns.
Epigenetics
Experience changes gene expression.
Identical twins differences
Environment activates different genes.
HIV transmission
Unprotected sex, shared needles, mother-to-child.
HIV health impact
It attacks the immune system.
Weakened immune system effects
Minor illnesses become serious and dangerous.
How does your brain use both bottom-up and top-down processing when interpreting
complex visual scenes, such as reading a blurry sign or recognizing a familiar face in a
Crowd?
Bottom-up processing begins with sensory receptors detecting basic elements such as lines, angles, or colors. Top-down processing uses experience and expectations to interpret what those elements mean. When reading a blurry sign or spotting someone in a crowd, the brain uses both: the sensory input (bottom-up) plus your memory of words or familiar faces (top-down)
Why do two objects of the same color look different in sunlight versus dim indoor light,
and how does color constancy allow us to perceive them as the same color?
Lighting changes the wavelengths reflected by objects, so two objects can look different in sunlight versus indoors. Color constancy helps the brain perceive consistent color despite changes in illumination.
How do monocular cues like relative size and linear perspective and binocular cues
like retinal disparity and convergence help people have depth perception?
Monocular cues like relative size and linear perspective allow depth perception with one eye.
Binocular cues like retinal disparity and convergence rely on both eyes to judge distance.
Why is sensory adaptation an important function for survival?
Sensory adaptation reduces sensitivity to constant stimuli, helping the brain focus on new or important information that may signal danger or opportunity.
Explain the process of transduction in one of the five senses. How does physical energy
(light, sound, or pressure) get turned into something your brain can understand?
Transduction converts physical energy into neural impulses. For example, in vision, the eyes receive light waves, transform them into electrical signals in the retina, and deliver them to the brain for interpretation.