Ch 3 - Sensation and Perception
Across
- 1. A new stimulus must differ at a constant proportion from original stimulus if a change is to be detected.
- 4. A type of threshold that's the minimum amount of sensation we can detect.
- 6. A kind of hearing loss that results from damage to the middle/inner ear (EX. excessive loud noises).
- 7. A type of threshold that's the smallest/weakest amount of change in a sensation we can detect.
- 9. The enhancement of one or more sense in response to loss of another sense.
- 11. A condition when one sensory system triggers automatic sensations in another.
- 12. The process of making meaning out of sensory info.
- 13. A mode of info processing where info flows from higher-level structures in brain to lower-level structures.
- 14. A theory that detection of sensory stimulus involves some amount of decision making.
- 15. A color vision theory that combines both ideas from Trichromatic and Opponent-process theories.
- 17. Specialized cells that transform physical energy into nerve impulses.
- 18. A decline in sensitivity to a constant stimulus.
- 19. The process of converting energy from the environment into nerve impulses.
Down
- 2. A mode of info processing where info flows from sensory receptors up to brain.
- 3. A kind of hearing loss that results from damage to the eardrums (EX. earwax buildup).
- 5. A small area of the retina that's insensitive to light, where the optic nerve leaves the eye.
- 8. A snail shaped tube in the inner ear where sound vibration is converted into nerve impulses.
- 9. The process of sensing our environment through sensory organs.
- 10. The ability to perceive sameness even when the image on retina changes
- 16. A tissue thin inner lining made of light-sensitive photoreceptors in the eye.