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1 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt SensesVisionHearing PerceptionMisc
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2 Your sense of balance.
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3 Vestibular sense
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4 You and a friend see some hovering shapes in the sky. You say they are weather balloons, your friend says they are flying saucers. The two of you share a sensation, but differ in this.
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5 Perception (Perception is the process of interpreting sensations and giving them meaning. So even though you and your friend are “seeing” the same stimulus, your interpretations are different.)
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6 Your sense of the position & movement of your body parts.
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7 Kinesthesis
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8 Sound waves pass through this part of your inner ear triggering nerve impulses.
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9 Cochlea
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10 The German word for form. A group of psychologists who studied form perception used this as their label
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11 Gestalt
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12 Your dog’s ability to hear a whistle that you can’t is due to this.
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13 Absolute thresholds (Dogs have sound receptors that can pick up higher frequency sounds than do humans. This means that dogs have a lower absolute threshold for sound than do humans. That is, dogs’ sound receptors are more sensitive)
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14 The minimum difference needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time.
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15 Difference threshold
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16 You don’t feel the watch on your wrist because of this.
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17 Sensory Adaptation
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18 When you are at prom talking with your friends and you hear a friend call your name in the midst of all of the noise. This illustrates:
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19 Cocktail Party Effect
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20 Texting is dangerous while driving due to this focusing of conscious awareness elsewhere
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21 Selective Attention
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22 This theory says that the retina contains three different color receptors – sensitive to red, green, blue- & can combine to make any color.
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23 Young-Helmholtz trichromatic ( 3 color) theory?
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24 The opponent-process theory argues that color vision is enabled by opposing colors. These are the 3 sets of opposing colors.
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25 Red-Green Blue-Yellow White-Black
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26 These are the nerve cells that allow you to see angles, lines, and edges in this room.
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27 Feature detectors
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28 The theory that your central nervous system blocks or allows pain signals to pass through.
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29 Gate-control theory of pain
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30 Without these light receptors you’d see the world in black and white.
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31 Rods
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32 The Gestalt principle that things that are alike tend to be seen as going together.
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33 Similarity
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34 An apparatus used to test whether or not babies have depth perception.
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35 Visual Cliff
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36 A certain time window during development during which an organism must have certain experiences in order to develop normal perception.
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37 Critical Period
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38 It may explain why many people won’t notice that this this sentence has repeated a word.
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39 Perceptual Set
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40 When my driver’s license says my eyes are blue, it is referring to this part of the eye.
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41 Iris
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42 It’s where the optic nerve leaves the eye. You can’t see an image if it is projected here.
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43 Blind Spot
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44 Theory that says that sense detection varies depending on a persons’ decision, alertness, motivation
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45 Signal Detection
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46 This type of deafness might occur because you listened to music far too loud.
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47 Sensorineural Deafness
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48 A clear covering that protects the eye.
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49 Cornea
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50 These are the 5 tastes.
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51 Sweet, sour, bitter, umani, salty
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