perception
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- The point above which a stimulus is perceived and below which it is not perceived is called a stimulus
- threshold
- Who initially discovered the idea of the absolute threshold?
- Fechner
- A stimulus that is detected less than 50% of the time is called a(n) ________ stimulus
- subliminal
- Lori is participating in a hearing experiment. The researcher presents her with a series of 7 tones, ranging from very quiet to very loud. Over the course of ten trials, Lori can hear Tone #5 every time. However, she only hears Tone #4 during two of the
- subliminal stimulus
- At high stimulus intensities, it takes _____ changes in order to detect a JND between two stimuli.
- large
- _____ areas in the brain change sensations to perceptions.
- Association
- Gestalt psychologists explain perceptions based on the principles of organization which are rules that specify how
- our brains organize sensations into perceptions
- The rules of organization such as figure-ground and closure were developed by the _________ to describe how we perceive
- Gestalt psychologists
- The principle of closure states that:
- we tend to fill in missing parts of a figure
- If you see two people walking and holding hands, you perceive that they are a couple because of the Gestalt principle of:
- proximity
- What are the three dimensions that our visual system allows us to perceive? Of the three, which one is added by our visual system?
- depth, width, height-depth
- Imagine that you are looking at a baseball coming toward you. The farther away you perceive the object to be, the:
- the smaller the retinal disparity
- As you look down the street, you see an apartment building partially overlapping an office building. Based on the depth cue of _____, you know that the apartment building is closer to you.
- interposition
- If two objects are the same size, yet one appears to be larger, you make the assumption that that object is closer. Why?
- relative size
- Which depth cues involves objects in motion?
- motion parallax
- Based on your study of illusions, which of the following best describes perception
- active
- You want to learn more about holistic thinking. Based on the study described in Module Six, which culture would you want to visit?
- China
- A subject has been exposed to three lights flashing in rapid succession every thirty seconds. After many of these trials, the experimenter has two of them flash. If the subject, in error, reports seeing three lights flash for this trial, it is probably b
- perceptual set
- If someone reportedly has precognition, then they supposedly have the ability to:
- foretell events before they happen
- Out of 12 alleged psychics who have accepted James Randi's $100,000 challenge, how many have successfully demonstrated their psychic ability?
- 0
- Traffic arrows composed of flashing lights are an example of:
- phi movement
- Our first impression of other people is influenced by:
- facial features
- A quality inspector at the local manufacturing plant carefully examines a product for flaws using a special light. The flaws show up as dark green spots of light. For this inspector, the _________ is the point at which a flaw can be detected.
- threshold
- The level at which a stimulus is detected more than 50% of the time is called the
- absolute threshold
- A subliminal stimulus is one that has:
- less than 50% chance of being detected
- The smallest increase or decrease in the intensity of a stimulus that a person is able to detect is called a(n):
- JND
- The proportioned increase in the intensity of a stimulus needed to produce a just noticeable difference is called:
- Weber's Law
- The transformation of sensations into a meaningful perception
- is an unconsious instantaneous process
- Based upon your understanding of perception and factors that can influence it, which saying is the most appropriate to describe perception?
- Different strokes for different folks
- Looking up at the blue sky, Matt imagined that he saw the clouds as animal shapes. Viewing clouds against the sky is an example of which principle of perceptual organization?
- figure and ground
- A skywriter is writing the words "VOTE FOR JOHNSON" in the bluesky above a football stadium during a game. However, his emission system becomes clogged so that only parts of the letters appear. Johnson tells him not to worry, the crowd will per
- closure
- The Gestalt rule of _________ states that we tend to organize stimuli in the most basic way possible.
- simplicity
- Because the eyes are separated by several inches, each eye receives a slightly different image. This is called
- retinal disparity
- In a sketch of the New York downtown area, Vincent creates a feeling of depth by drawing skyscrapers so that they partially overlap. The cue for depth he is using is known as:
- interposition
- Which cue for depth relies on the fact that dust, smog, or water vapor give distant objects a hazy look?
- atmospheric perspective
- An illusion is a distorted perception of what?
- reality
- ______ cues make the moon on the horizon look larger because it appears ______.
- distance, farther away
- The key idea in perceptual set is:
- expectation
- The ability to see things that are not actually present is called:
- clairvoyance
- Professor Ibanez wishes to scientifically study ESP. Which is the most preferred method for study?
- Ganzfeld procedure
- The fact that our first impressions of people are influenced by their facial features, hairstyles, and skin color suggest that perceptions are:
- interpretations
- In order to answer the question, "At what point are you aware of a stimulus?" one should measure the:
- absolute threshold
- The just noticeable difference serves as the foundation for:
- Weber's Law
- An orange blob is to a tiger as sensation is to ________.
- perception
- In constructing a perception, sense organs:
- transform energy into electrical signals
- The perceptual rule that makes important things stand out is called:
- figure-ground
- A famous artist has made a name for herself by the way she leaves objects in paintings incompletely drawn. Yet when we look at her works, we perceive the complete objects. What organizational rule of perception is occurring?
- closure
- We tend to perceive complex figures as divided into several simple figures. Why?
- simplicity rule
- What term describes our tendency to perceive sizes, shapes, and colors as remaining the same even though their physical characteristics keep changing?
- perceptual constancy
- We are able see in three dimensions. What are the three dimensions?
- depth, width, height
- How could a cyclops land an airplane?
- Rely on monocular cues
- The convergence of parallel lines, giving the feeling of distance, is called:
- linear perspective
- The depth cues of light and shadow make brightly-lit objects appear ___ while objects in the shadows are perceived to be _______.
- closer; farther away
- A famous painter used dust and clouds to created a depth cue in her paintings. She used _______ as a depth cue.
- atmospheric perspective
- Illusions demonstrate what happens to our perceptual processes when:
- perceptual cues are distorted
- With regard to the moon illusion, people tend to perceive an elevated moon to be ________ compared to the horizon moon
- closer
- Should you scrap the Study Guide and buy a subliminal message tape? Research suggest that any improvement you get with those tapes is probably due to:
- a self-fulfilling prophecy
- Based on research, subliminal messages can:
- influence emotional and cognitive processes
- Lois tells her friend Karl to always type class assignments on an expensive typewriter because instructors are less likely to spot errors on an official-looking page. Lois's advice relies on
- perceptual set
- The group of psychic experiences that involve perceiving or sending information outside normal sensory process is called
- extrasensory perception
- Julia says that she can see objects that no one else can see. This is an example of:
- clairvoyance
- The _________ procedure is used to test for telepathic communication and was used by Bem and Honorton in their study.
- Ganfeld
- In animated cartoons, movement is created by the rapid presentation of still images. This movement is known as:
- apparent motion
- As part of a psychology experiment, Linda sits in a small, completely darkened room and looks through an apparatus. At the sound of a tone, she is exposed to a brief flash of light. These lights vary in intensity. After each tone, she reports whether she
- absolute threshold
- Doctors fail to detect about ____ of tumors on mammograms.
- 10%
- Fechner is to Weber as ________ is to just noticeable difference
- absolute threshold
- The first awareness of some outside stimulus is called a(n):
- sensation
- Sensation is to ________ as perception is to ________.
- meaningless; meaningful
- When listening to music, the experience of hearing each individual note would be a __________, while interpreting the meaning of each note is an example of __________.
- sensation; perception
- Structuralism is to Gestalt as ______ is to _______.
- addition; rules
- The ability to separate figure from ground is:
- innate
- The principle of proximity states that:
- we tend to group together objects that are close to each other physically
- The principle of continuity states that:
- we organize forms along a smooth line or path
- You see a friend down the street. The visual image you receive is of a person who is the size of a doll, yet you know your friend hasn't shrunk since you last saw him. This is due to which of the following?
- size constancy
- The muscles that move the entire eye give cues to depth through:
- convergence
- The advantage to the human species of having two eyes is:
- retinal disparity
- A person who is blind in one eye uses more ________ cues than ___________ cues
- monocular; binocular
- If you are looking at a lighthouse in the fog, the lighthouse will appear farther away than it really is because of a monocular depth cue called:
- atmospheric perspective
- The brain transforms the speed of moving objects into indicators of distance because of a depth cue called:
- motion parallax
- Why didn't Congress make subliminal advertising illegal?
- it's ineffective
- The example presented in your textbook about assuming that a body-builder is a large man, but in fact, he a small man, represents the influence of:
- perceptual set
- Herb claims that he can read other people's thoughts. This ability is called:
- telepathy
- Felipe claims to be able to move objects simply by concentrating on them. This psychic ability is known as:
- psychokinesis
- The illusion of lights moving that are actually stationary is called:
- phi movement
- A computer-generated illusionary experience is called:
- virtual reality
- An absolute threshold is the intensity level that you detect ?
- 50% of the time
- Dr. Wilson is reading a mammogram. She knows that one way to increase the accuracy of the mammogram is to:
- ask another Dr to read it, too
- Danny is taking a shower. After ten minutes in the shower, the hot water runs out. The point at which Danny can tell that the water is getting cold represents his:
- JND
- At low stimulus intensities, it takes _____ changes in order to detect a JND between two stimuli.
- small
- A three-month-old child is being prepared to get a shot at a health clinic. She detects the needle just as a long line and does not react to it or interpret it. To her it is just a long line and nothing more. This is an example of:
- sensation
- Perception is best defined as the:
- combination and interpretation of sensations
- Omar and Heidi look at a beautiful flower. Omar sees it as a Grand Lady Hybrid Strain X-6. This illustrates:
- how perceptions are personalized interpretations
- Professor Karweick walks into her filled classroom, immediately perceiving students as sitting in rows rather than in a haphazard fashion. This is similar to what principle of perceptual organization?
- similarity
- At her high school dance, Rhonda perceives her fellow students as small groups of people talking to one another rather than as a large mass of people filling the gym. This situation is similar to what principle of perceptual organization?
- proximity
- Mark is coming in for a night landing in his twin-engine plane. He sees blue lights on the ground before him. Mark perceives this to be the outline of the runway. What principle of perceptual organization is he most likely using?
- continuity
- Diane and Debbie are at an outdoor circus. Their father has purchased each a helium balloon. Debbie accidentally lets go of her balloon and it floats farther and farther away. The balloon appears to becoming smaller and smaller. Both Diane and Debbie bel
- size constancy
- A green car looks like a green car, regardless of whether it is dawn or dusk, because of:
- color constancy
- Which depth cue is based on the muscles of the eye providing information?
- convergence
- If one object partially overlaps another object, the partially overlapping object will appear closer because of the ________ depth cue.
- interposition
- To show a set of railroad tracks moving off into the distance, an artist paints the tracks so that the rails converge. This depth cue is known as:
- linear perspective
- The light and shadow depth cue gives objects a?
- 3 dimensional look
- According to motion parallax, near objects appear ________, whereas objects in the distance appear _________.
- to move quickly, to move slowly
- Impossible figures seem impossible because our previous experience with line drawings leads us to interpret figures as:
- three dimensional
- The study on subliminal messages cited in your textbook suggests that among the subjects, 50% reported improvements in memory or self-esteem. The type of improvement, memory or self-esteem, was determined by
- the title of the tape not content!
- In the past, Burmese women were considered attractive if they had exceptionall
- long necks
- Marta sets up a booth at a local fair and claims she can tell the future by looking at a person's palm. She is claiming to have which of the following abilities?
- precognition
- You are at a movie theater and you mentally will your popcorn to rise out of your hands and float through the air, and it does! You have just experienced the phenomenon of :
- psychokinesis
- How do researchers evaluate testimonials of psi phenomenon?
- reject-too prone to bias
- As you look at a series of still pictures presented at about 24 frames per second, you perceive motion. Which of the following allows you to fill in between the images?
- closure
- According to the textbook, a promising use of virtual reality is to:
- treat phobias like a fear of spiders
- The smallest increase or decrease in the intensity of a stimulus that a person can detect is called a
- JND
- The increase in intensity of a stimulus needed to produce a JND grows in proportion to the intensity of the initial stimulus; this is called
- Weber's Law
- Our first awareness of sensory information, in the form of meaningless bits of info, is called a
- sensation
- When many bits of sensory info have been assembled into a meaningful image, it is called a ____which can be biased or distorted by our unique set of experiences
- perception
- Early Psychologists discovered a set of rules or principles that our brains use to automatically group or arrange stimuli into perceptual experiences. These early researchers who were called______psychologists, disagreed with other early psychologists wh
- Gestalt, Structuralists
- You automatically separate an image into a more dominant, detailed figure and a less detailed background according to the
- figure-ground rule
- You fill in the missing parts to form a complete image as a result of the _______rule
- closure
- Although physical qualities of stimuli may change, you may perceive them as remaining the same because of
- perceptual constancy
- AS a car drives away, its image on your retina becomes smaller but you know that the car does not shrink because of
- size constancy
- When you close a door, its shape on your retina changes from a rectangle to a trapezoid, but you perceive the door as remaining the same due to
- shape constancy
- If you had a bright red car, it would appear red in bright light and still appear to be red in dimmer light because of
- color constancy
- Cues for depth perception that depend on both eyes are called
- binocular cues
- Cues for depth perception that depend on a single eye are called
- monocular cues
- The binocular cue that occurs when your eyes move inward to track a fly landing on your nose is called
- convergence
- The binocular cue that occurs when each eye receives a slightly different image is called
- retinal disparity
- Monocular cues for depth perception include; cues from overlapping objects called
- interposition
- Monocular cues from two parallel lines converging are called
- linear perspective
- Monocular cues from the presence of dust and smog are called
- atmospheric perspective
- Monocular cues from larger and smaller images are called
- relative size
- Monocular cues for depth perception included cues from nearer and farther objects moving at different speeds called
- motion parallax
- If perceptual cues are so changed that our brains can no longer interpret them correctly, we perceive a distorted image of reality called an
- illusion
- Such a distorted perception illustrates that perception is an active process and that we rely on previous______when perceiving new situations
- experiences
- What are the 3 basic questions psychologists ask about perception
-
What point are we aware of a stimulus?
What point do we know a stimulus intensity has increased or decreased?
How are meaningless sensations combined into meaningful perceptions? - The intensity level at which a person has a 50% chance of perceiving the stimulus is called the
- absolute threshold
- Measuring the smallest increase or decrease in stimulus intensity that a person can detect is called a
- JND
- Experiences that are typcial of a society and shared by its members are called
- cultural influences
- Because of cultural influences, Americans tend to engage more in _____thinking while Easterners engage more in_______thinking
- analytical,holistic
- The perception and transmission of thoughts or images by other than normal sensory channels are referred to as psychic experiences or
- PSI phenomena
- ESP which stands for ______includes four psychic abilities
- extrasensory perception
- The ability to transfer one's thoughts to another or read another's thoughts is called
- telepathy
- The ability to foretell events is called
- precognition
- The ability to perceive events or objects that are out of sight is called
- clairvoyance
- The ability to move objects without touching them is called
- psychokinesis
- Two reasons many researchers are skeptical of psychic abilities is that some supposedly psychic phenomena were actually accomplished with________and some previous studies that supported ESP had questionable__________
-
trickery
methodology - Although a recent study supported the occurence of psi phenomena, many researchers are waiting for these positive results to be __
- replicated
- When you view objects moving in space, it is called
- real motion
- When you view images of stationary objects that are presented in a rapid sequence, it is called______motion which is the basic principle used to create movies
- apparent
- The illusion that stationary lights are moving can be traced to the work of ______who called this phenomenon_____movement
-
Max Wertheimer
phi - A perceptual experience that is created by allowing the viewer to enter and participate in computer-generated images is called_______; it breaks down some of the traditional boundaries between reality and fantasy.
- virtual reality
- Stimuli when organized in the most basic, elementary way is called
- simplicity
- stimuli that appear the same tend to be grouped together are called
- similarity
- Stimuli that are near one another tend to be grouped together, this is called
- proximity
- Stimuli that are arranged in a smooth line or curve tend to be perceived as forming a continuous path, this is the ____rule
- continuity
- psy
- Glossary of perception