Difference threshold
Minimum difference between any two stimuli that a person can detect 50 percent of the time has been reached.
Subliminal stimulation
Receipt of messages that are below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness.
signal detection theory
There is no actual absolute threshold because the threshold changes with a variety of factors, including fatigue, attention, expectations, motivation, and emotional distress.
Absolute threshold
Weakest level of a stimulus that can be correctly detected at least half the time.
Sensory adaptation
Allows you to focus your attention on informative changes in your environment without being distracted by irrelevant data such as odors or background noises.
Transduction
Transformation of stimulus energy to the electrochemical energy of neural impulses.
Perception
Process of selecting, organizing, and interpreting sensations, enabling you to recognize meaningful objects and events.
Astigmatism
Caused by an irregularity in the shape of the cornea and/or the lens.
Bipolar cells
Rods and cones both synapse with a second layer of neurons in front of them in your retina.
Dark adaptation
When it suddenly becomes dark, your gradual increase in sensitivity to the low level of light
Blind spot
Where the optic nerve exits the retina, there aren’t any rods or cones, so the part of an image that falls on your retina in that area is missing.
Feature detectors
Neurons in the visual cortex that respond to certain features such as lines, angles, movements, etc
Parallel processing
Simultaneous processing of stimulus elements
Ewald Hering’s opponent-process theory
Certain neurons can be either excited or inhibited, depending on the wavelength of light, and complementary wavelengths have opposite effects.
Hearing
Primary sensory modality for human language.
Amplitude
Measured in logarithmic units of pressure called decibels (dB).
Pitch
Highness or lowness of the sound
sound localization
Process where you determine the location of a sound
Georg von Békésy’s place theory
Position on the basilar membrane at which waves reach their peak depends on the frequency of a tone.
frequency theory
Rate of the neural impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, enabling you to sense its pitch.
Conduction deafness
Loss of hearing that results when the eardrum is punctured or any of the ossicles lose their ability to vibrate.
Nerve (sensorineural) deafness
Results from damage to the cochlea, hair cells, or auditory neurons.
Somatosensation
General term for four classes of tactile sensations: touch/pressure, warmth, cold, and pain.
Itching
Result of repeated gentle stimulation of pain receptors, a tickle results from repeated stimulation of touch receptors, and the sensation of wetness results from simultaneous stimulation of adjacent cold and pressure receptors.
Touch
Necessary for normal development and promotes a sense of well-being.
gate-control theory
From Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall. It attempts to explain the experience of pain.
Kinesthesis
System that enables you to sense the position and movement of individual parts of your body.
vestibular sense
Your sense of equilibrium or body orientation.
Gustation (taste) and olfaction (smell)
Known as chemical senses because the stimuli are molecules.
Taste receptor cells
Most concentrated on your tongue in taste buds embedded in tissue called fungiform papillae, but also on the roof of your mouth and the opening of your throat.
Tasters
Have an average number of taste buds
Supertasters
More sensitive than others to bitter, spicy foods and alcohol, which they find unpleasant. Above average number of taste buds
Nontasters
Have fewer taste buds than average
Bottom-up processing
When sensory receptors detect external stimulation and send the raw data to the brain for analysis.
Selective attention
You focus your awareness on only a limited aspect of all you are capable of experiencing.
Top-down processing
Takes what you already know about particular stimulation, what you remember about the context in which it usually appears, and how you label and classify it, to give meaning to your perceptions.
Visual capture
Where you perceive a conflict among senses, vision usually dominates.
phi phenomenon
The illusion of movement created by presenting visual stimuli in rapid succession.
Figure–ground relationship
The figure is the dominant object, and the ground is the natural and formless setting for the figure.
Proximity
Nearness of objects to each other, is an organizing principle.
Principle of closure
Tendency to fill in gaps in patterns.
Principle of similarity
Like stimuli tend to be perceived as parts of the same pattern.
Principle of continuity/continuation
tendency to group stimuli into forms that follow continuous lines or patterns.
Optical or visual illusions
Discrepancies between the appearance of a visual stimulus and its physical reality.
Depth perception
Ability to judge the distance of objects.
Monocular cues
Clues about distance based on the image of one eye
Binocular Cues
Clues about distance based on combined image of two eyes.
Retinal disparity
The slightly different view the two eyes have of the same object because the eyes are a few centimeters apart.
Motion parallax
Images of objects at different distances moving across the retina at different rates.
Relative size
Cue to distance where the closer of two same-size objects casts a larger image on your retina than the farther one.
Interposition (Overlap)
When a closer object cuts off the view of part or all of a more distant one.
Relative clarity
When closer objects appear sharper than more distant, hazy objects.
Texture gradient
Cue to distance where closer objects have a coarser, more distinct texture than faraway objects that appear more densely packed or smooth.
Relative height/elevation
When the objects closest to the horizon appear to be the farthest from you.
Linear perspective
Cue to distance where parallel lines, such as edges of sidewalks, seem to converge in the distance.
Relative brightness
When the closer of two identical objects reflects more light to your eyes.
Optical illusions
Where two identical horizontal bars seem to differ in length, may occur because distance cues lead one line to be judged as farther away than the other. Like those from MĂĽller-Lyer and Ponzo.