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Cognition- Exploring the Science of the Mind- Chapter 3 Exam Questions with Verified Solutions Latest Update 2024 (Graded A+)

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Cognition- Exploring the Science of the Mind- Chapter 3 Exam Questions with Verified Solutions Latest Update 2024 (Graded A+) bottom-up processing - Answers Takes the basic sensory components of an object and adds them to identity what it is top-down processing - Answers information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience, expectations, and memories Akinetopsia - Answers Disorder in which patient is unable to see objects in motion - as if they're lagging in time. Lens - Answers Structure in the eye that focuses light rays on the retina, along with the cornea. Surrounded by a band of muscle. When muscle tightens, lens buldges (nearby objects). When muscle relaxes, lens flattens (far objects). Retina - Answers Light sensitive tissue that lines the back of the eyeball Photoreceptors - Answers Specialized neural cells that respond directly to incoming light. 2 types: rods and cones Rods - Answers Photoreceptors that are sensitive to low levels of light and play an essential role for moving in semidarkness. Can distinguish between intensities of light, but not colour. None in fovea, mostly periphery Cones - Answers Photoreceptors that are less sensitive than rods and need more incoming light to operate. Sensitive to colour. mostly in fovea, none in periphery Acuity - Answers Ability to see fine detail. Much higher in cones than rods. Color Vision Theory - Answers color perception occurs through three kinds of cones and their response (S,M,L) color you see is perceived by the activation of these 3 types of cones Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) - Answers In the thalamus. Receives information from the optic nerve and transmit it to the primary projection area for vision in the occipital lobe. Edge enhancement - Answers a process by which the visual system makes edges as visible as possible because of the lateral inhibition of cells in the middle by outer cells Mach bands - Answers Perception of a thin dark band on the dark side of a light-dark border and a thin light band on the light side of the border. These bands are an illusion because they occur even though corresponding intensity changes do not exist. Caused by edge enhancement. Single-cell recording - Answers A technique through which investigators can record the pattern of electrical changes within a single neuron, moment by moment Receptive field - Answers The size and shape of the area in the visual world to which a cell responds Orientation-specific visual fields - Answers Cells that fire to specific orientations - they have a preferred orientations that they will fire most for. Ex) edge detectors, angle detectors Area V1 - Answers The site on the occipital lobe where axons from the lateral geniculate nucleus first reach the cerebral cortex. Contains cells that detect every possible stimulus. Area MT - Answers An area in the visual cortex that contains neurons that are acutely sensitive to direction and speed of movement (damage --> akinetopsia) Area V4 - Answers An area in the visual cortex that contains neurons that fire most strongly to certain colours and shapes. Parallel processing - Answers All neurons are updating each other automatically in both directions. Advantages: speed, mutual influence Serial processing - Answers A system in which steps are carried out one at a time. P cells - Answers 1 of 2 types of cells within the optic nerve. specialized for spatial analysis and the detailed analysis of form (PATTERN). M cells - Answers 1 of 2 types of cells within the optic nerve. specialized for the detection of MOTION and the perception of depth. What system - Answers The visual pathway leading from the visual cortex to the temporal lobe; especially involved in identifying visual objects. Where system - Answers The visual pathway leading from the visual cortex to the parietal lobe; especially involved in locating objects in space and coordinating movements. Ungerleider and Mishkin - Answers Monkeys who had part of parietal lobe removed- object discrimination problem Monkeys who had part of their temporal lobe removed- landmark discrimination problem Ellison and Crowley - Answers deactivated postural parietal lobe, couldn't make distance judgements Binding problem - Answers Parallel processing splits up how we view the world around us, but we don't see the world in pieces. Binding problem is that we don't know how this happens. Spatial position - Answers Overlaying sensory maps and integrating stimuli to perceive something as one object.

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Cognition- Exploring the Science of the Mind- CH3
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Cognition- Exploring the Science of the Mind- CH3

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Subido en
5 de diciembre de 2024
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Cognition- Exploring the Science of the Mind- Chapter 3 Exam Questions with Verified Solutions Latest
Update 2024 (Graded A+)



bottom-up processing - Answers Takes the basic sensory components of an object and adds them to
identity what it is

top-down processing - Answers information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as
when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience, expectations, and memories

Akinetopsia - Answers Disorder in which patient is unable to see objects in motion - as if they're lagging
in time.

Lens - Answers Structure in the eye that focuses light rays on the retina, along with the cornea.
Surrounded by a band of muscle. When muscle tightens, lens buldges (nearby objects). When muscle
relaxes, lens flattens (far objects).

Retina - Answers Light sensitive tissue that lines the back of the eyeball

Photoreceptors - Answers Specialized neural cells that respond directly to incoming light. 2 types: rods
and cones

Rods - Answers Photoreceptors that are sensitive to low levels of light and play an essential role for
moving in semidarkness. Can distinguish between intensities of light, but not colour. None in fovea,
mostly periphery

Cones - Answers Photoreceptors that are less sensitive than rods and need more incoming light to
operate. Sensitive to colour. mostly in fovea, none in periphery

Acuity - Answers Ability to see fine detail. Much higher in cones than rods.

Color Vision Theory - Answers color perception occurs through three kinds of cones and their response
(S,M,L) color you see is perceived by the activation of these 3 types of cones

Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) - Answers In the thalamus. Receives information from the optic nerve
and transmit it to the primary projection area for vision in the occipital lobe.

Edge enhancement - Answers a process by which the visual system makes edges as visible as possible
because of the lateral inhibition of cells in the middle by outer cells

Mach bands - Answers Perception of a thin dark band on the dark side of a light-dark border and a thin
light band on the light side of the border. These bands are an illusion because they occur even though
corresponding intensity changes do not exist. Caused by edge enhancement.

Single-cell recording - Answers A technique through which investigators can record the pattern of
electrical changes within a single neuron, moment by moment

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