Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Unit V

Sensation and Perception

  • Sensation: your window to the world
  • Perception: interpreting what comes in your window
Sensation

  • The process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive stimulus from the environment
Bottom-Up vs. Top-Down Processing

  • Bottom-Up: begins with recess receptors and works up to the brains integration of sensory information
  • Top-Down: information processing guided by higher level mental proccesses
Absolute Threshold

  • The minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time
Difference Threshold

  • The minimum difference that a person can detect between two stimuli
  • Also known as Just Noticeable Difference
Weber's Law

  • The idea that, to perceive a difference between two stimuli, they must differ by a constant percentage; not a constant amount
Signal Detection Theory

  • Predicts how we detect a stimulus amid other stimuli
  • Assumes that we do not have an absolute threshold
Sensory Adaptation

  • Decreases responsiveness to stimuli due to constant stimulation
Selective Attention

  • The focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
Cocktail-Party Phenomenon

  • The cocktail party effect describes the effect describes the ability to focuses one's listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conversations and back ground noises, ignoring other conversations
  • Form selective attention
Vision

  • Our most domination sense
  • Visual capture
  • Short wavelength= high frequency (bluish colors, high-pitched sounds)
  • Long wavelength= low frequency (reddish colors, low-pitched sounds)
  • The height if a wave gives us its hue (color)
  • The longer the wave the more red
  • The shorter the wavelength
Transduction


  • Transferring signals into neural impulses 
  • Information goes from the senses to the thalamus, then to the various areas in the brain
  • Transduction: conversion of one for, of energy to another
  • Stimulus energies to neural impulses
Color Vision 

Young-Helmholtz Trichromatic (three color) Theory
  • Red, blue, green
  • Three types of cones can make millions of combinations of colors
Opponent-Process Theory

  • The sensory receptors come in pairs
  • Red/green
  • Yellow/blue
  • Black
  • If one color is stimulated, the other is inhibited
Hearing


  • We hear sound waves 
  • The height of the wave gives is the  amplitude of the sound
  • The frequency of the wave gives is the pitch of the sound
Transduction in the Ear

  • Sound waves hit the eardrum the anvil then hammer then stirrup then oval window
  • Everything is just vibrating
  • Then the cochlea vibrates
  • The cochlea is lines with mucus called basilar membrane
  • In basilar membrane there are hair cells
  • When hair cells vibrate they turn vibrations into neural impulses which are called organ of corti
  • Sent then to thalamus up auditory nerve
Place Theory

  • Different hairs vibrate in the cochlea when there are different pitches
  • So some hair vibrate when they hear high pitches and others vibrate when they hear low pitches
Frequency Theory

  • All the hairs vibrate but at different speeds
Deafness
Conduction Deafness

  • Something goes wrong with the sound and the vibration on the way to the cochlea
  • You can replace the bones or get a hearing aid to help
Nerve Deafness 

  • The hair cells in the cochlea get damaged
  • Loud noises can cause this type of deafness 
  • No way to replace the hairs
  • Cochlea implants is possible
Sensory Interaction 

  • The principle that one sense may influence another
Taste 

  • We have bumps on our tongue and papillae
  • Taste buds are located on the papillae (all over mouth)
  • Sweet, salty, sour, bitter, hot/spicy
Unami 

  • Favorable meaty, savory taste 
Touch
  • Receptors located in our skin
  • Gate Control Theory of Pain: spinal cord contains the neurological gate that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass onto the brain
Vestibuler Sense
  • Tells us where our body is oriented in space
  • Our sense of balance
Kinesthetic Sense
  • Tells us where our body parts are
  • Receptors located in our muscles and joints chapter
Perception
  • The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
Gestalt Philosophy
  • The whole greater than the sum of its parts
Figure-Ground Relationships
  • The organization of the visual field into objects (figures) that should stand our from their surroundings (ground)
Grouping
  • The perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into groups that we understand 
Depth Perception
  • The ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images that strike the retina are two dimensions
  • Allows us to judge distance
Binocular Cues
  • Retina Disparity: a binocular cue for seeing depth
  • The closer an object comes to you the greater the disparity is between the two images
Monocular Cues 
  • Interposition is when something is blocking our view of seeing something then we think it is actually closer to us
  • Relative size when we think two objects are the same but the smaller one is farther away
  • Blurry things seem father away, also known as relative clarity
  • We refer to texture gradient when things are coarser and they seem closer to us
  • We refer to relative height when things are higher up then we can see, and seem farther away
  • We refer to relative motion when things that are closer move faster
  • We refer to liner perspective when parallel lines seem to converge with distance
  • When referring to light and shadow, objects that get less light and look dimmer seem far away
Motion Perception
  • We determine by size of things
Phi Phenomenon
  • When two or might lights blink in succession
Perceptual Consistency
  • When we perceive objects as unchanging even though they have changed
Language and Thought
Language
  • The way we speak or write words, and how we communicate with them
  • Phenomenons are sound units
  • Morphemes are small units that have meaning
  • Grammar is used so hat we can communicate and understand each other
  • Semantics derive meaning in language (ed)
  • Syntax combine words in grammatical sentences
  • We learn more through mental pictures and also in words
Language Development
  • The babbling stage occurs when an infant is 3-4 months old and they make sounds
  • The one-word stage is when a child is 1-2 years old and use single words to tell things or communicate
  • The two-word stage is when the child is two and uses two words to communicate

Skinner 
  • Believed that we could explain the development of language trough the social learning theory
Chomsky Inborn Universal Grammar
  • We do not learn language, acquire it
  • We are able to learn any human language with the "learning box"
Whorf's Linguistic Relatively
  • Language determines how we think
Kohler's Chimpanzees
  • Chimps solve problems
  • Animals have signals and communicate
Intelligence 
  • The ability to use knowledge, learn, and adapt
  • The factor analysis is used by scientist to identify clusters on tests
  • Spearman used the factor analysis for his intelligence
  • Multiple intelligence was by Gardner by studying savants, including:
  1. Visual/Spatial
  2. Verbal/Linguistic
  3. Logical/Mathematical
  4. Bodily/Kinesthetic 
  5. Musical/Rythmic
  6. Interpersonal
  7. Intrapersonal
  8. Natural
  • Sternberg's 3 Aspects of Intelligence
  1. Analytical 
  2. Creative
  3. Practical
Emotional Intelligence
  • Perceive , express, understand, and control emotions
Mental Age
  • Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon made the concept, meaning the things someone should know by a particular age
  • The IQ Test is also known as the Stanford-Binet Test
Mental Abilities
  • Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale has 11 subtest using factor analysis
Aptitude v. Achievement Test
  • Aptitude test is used to see the ability of a person to learn
  • Achievement test is used to see what someone has learned
Intelligence Test 

1. Standarization
  • For a sample of people
  • Makes a bell curve
  • The flynn effect is when the performance rises
2. Reliability
  • Test yields consistent roles over time
3. Validity
  • Test measures what it's suppose to
  • Content validity occurs when the test samples behavior, while predictive validity samples future behavior
Intelligence
  • Can change depending on type 
  • Bell curve is different for whites and blacks
  • Math scores different across gender
  • Test are bias and need to be
Thinking
  • Cognition is thinking, knowing, remembering
  • Concepts are grouping of similar things like objects and ideas
  • Prototypes is a mental image, category
Solving Problems
  • Trial and error
  • Algorithms guarantee solving a particular problem
  • Heuristics allow is to make judgement and solve
  • An insight is a realization about a problem
Obstacles to Solving Problems
  • Conformation bias is referred to when someone looks for information that goes to their preconception
Match Problem
  • When seeing a problem from a new perspective is called fixation
Mental Set
  • Approach a problem the same way as done before
Functional Fixedness
  • Thinking of things only by their usual function
Types of Heuristics
  • When judging something by how well they match prototype is called representativeness heuristics
  • Estimating things by memory is called availability heuristics
Overconfidence
  • More confident than correct
Framing
  • Has drastic effects because the way it is posed
Belief Bias
  • Preexisting beliefs to distort reasoning
Belief Perseverance
  • Clinging to initial conception














     

3 comments:

  1. I would have loved to see the image of the match problem. I spent forever trying to make the 6 matches into four triangles. It is so true because we always look at things from the same perspective rather than approaching issues from a different angle. Also, i wonder if it is linked to how high of an intelligence or IQ a person has. Like for example, would have Asian male have been able to figure it out before i would, or it is just based on our preconceived notion of how things should be solved.

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  2. In reference to the portion of your notes on language, the video helped me understand the different stages of language development better. This link: http://www.asha.org/public/speech/development/ also provides further information on the development of language in infants. It shows how critical each of the stages is and it also discusses the different types of disorders that you may notice.

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  3. Great notes, theres not much to improve on. I personally prefer frequency theory over place theory because it explains sound better in relation to hearing pitches.

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