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Receptor Cells
Receptor Cells

... - change light into neural impulses the brain can understand ...
View Presentation
View Presentation

... provides “remote guidance” for sensing things at a distance eyes allow us to process form, color, movement and visual acuity ...
Chapter 3
Chapter 3

... • Left=3 groups of dots; Right=vertical columns of dots not horizontal rows ...
34-Sensory-Mechanism
34-Sensory-Mechanism

... in the cochlear fluid perilymph. The waves pass through the vestibular canal to the apex of the cochlea, then back toward the base of the cochlea via the tympanic canal and end on the round window. ...
PsychScich04
PsychScich04

... spatial perception (determining where an object is) • These two processing streams are therefore known as the “what” stream and the “where” stream ...
External anatomy of the ear
External anatomy of the ear

... cells of the Organ of Corti to vibrate. ...
Eye, Ear, Sensation & Perception
Eye, Ear, Sensation & Perception

... - change light into neural impulses the brain can understand ...
Recitation Worksheet 11
Recitation Worksheet 11

... 1. The gustatory system uses a labeled line model whereby each taste cell detects only one type of taste – for example, sweet is detected by taste cells that respond only to sweet, and each sweet taste cell is innervated only by neurons that carry sweet information. The olfactory system, however, us ...
5 Senses Powerpoint - Solon City Schools
5 Senses Powerpoint - Solon City Schools

... Bones of the middle ear = the hammer, anvil, stirrup which vibrate with the eardrum. ...
Abstract View ; The Salk Inst, San Diego, CA, USA
Abstract View ; The Salk Inst, San Diego, CA, USA

... visual system of Manduca sexta (Sphingidae, Lepidoptera) reveal two cell classes that are sensitive to the retreat or approach of an object. Stimulation with different looming stimuli and illusions (such as a rotating spiral) reveals that these cell types use different visual cues to determine direc ...
Presentation
Presentation

... were in the World Trade Center, but the majority of the interviews are from other parts of the country, from those who first heard the news on television or radio ...
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception

... • Sensation: the detection and sensing of ...
to specify axonal trajectories and target specificity of Jessell, 2000; Shira-
to specify axonal trajectories and target specificity of Jessell, 2000; Shira-

... NE levels increase when a threshold of expected uncertainty is passed, and norepinephrine shifts the network to use a different cue identity. Analogously, if your reliable dog Ollie started leading you to the wrong door consistently, you might decide something is wrong with him and try listening to ...
Slide ()
Slide ()

... The olfactory system. Odorants are detected by olfactory sensory neurons in the olfactory epithelium, which lines part of the nasal cavity. The axons of these neurons project to the olfactory bulb where they terminate on mitral and tufted cell relay neurons within glomeruli. The relay neuron axons p ...
Sensory organs and perception
Sensory organs and perception

... reaction. Aside from the differences in shape suggested by their names, rod and cone cells contain different light-processing chemicals (photopigments), perform different functions, and are distributed differently within the retina. Cone cells, which provide color vision and enable us to distinguish ...
04 Sensation and perception
04 Sensation and perception

... found only outside this area and become more numerous the farther they are from it. Thus, it is more difficult to distinguish colors when viewing objects at the periphery of one’s visual ...
The Nonvisual Sensory Systems
The Nonvisual Sensory Systems

... usually corrected by surgery or hearing aids Nerve Deafness damage to cochlea, hair cells or auditory nerve usually treated with hearing aids caused by genetics, disease, ototoxic drugs, etc. ...
The Sensory System * Ear/Nose/Tongue/Skin
The Sensory System * Ear/Nose/Tongue/Skin

... A square inch contains 72 feet of nerves and hundreds of receptors Able to detect pain and temperature ...
Sensation2011
Sensation2011

... Specialized neurons that are activated by stimulation and transduce (convert) it into a nerve impulse Sensory pathway – Bundles of neurons that carry information from the sense organs to the brain ...
Ch 4 Power Point
Ch 4 Power Point

... complete objects forms • Similarity: we group objects of similar size or shape • Simplicity: we group elements together to form a simple figure • Continuity: we follow objects in the direction we are led ...
bats2
bats2

...  Sound is wave of rarefaction and compression  has speed 330m/s, c = f * l  wavelength l - determines whether objects will reflect or diffract sound  frequency f  intensity  measured ...
Visual Perception
Visual Perception

... Monocular Cues: Interposition When the boundary of an object is interrupted by the presence of another object, we use this pattern of blocking as a cue to determine the object as more distant from us. The near object is perceived as interposed between the far object and us. ...
An introduction to hearing
An introduction to hearing

... • lots of facts known about higher way-stations (IC, MGN, cortex) • little known about their role • psychophysical evidence suggests auditory cortex ...
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception

... the fluid of the inner ear, the fluid causes the basilar membrane to move up and down, activating electrical potentials in the hair cells (the receptor cells for hearing). Temporal coding ...
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception

... Is it Sensation or Perception? “In college, on a date at the Spaghetti Station, I returned from the bathroom and plunked myself down in the wrong booth, facing the wrong man. I remained unaware he was not my date even as my date (a stranger to me) accosted Wrong Booth Guy, and then stormed out of t ...
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Sensory cue

A sensory cue is a statistic or signal that can be extracted from the sensory input by a perceiver, that indicates the state of some property of the world that the perceiver is interested in perceiving.A cue is some organization of the data present in the signal which allows for meaningful extrapolation. For example, Sensory cues include Visual cues, auditory cues, haptic cues, olfactory cues, environmental cues, and so on. Sensory cues are a fundamental part of theories of perception, especially theories of appearance (how things look).
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