Term
What are the three main categories of sensation from the skin? |
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Definition
Pain, pressure, and temperature |
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Term
Touch is the perception of what physical event? What kind of energy is being transduced? |
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Definition
Displacement of skin. Mechanical energy. |
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Term
Sensitivity to touch is most commonly measured with what two techniques? |
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Definition
Point localization and 2 point detection |
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Term
Our perception of heat and cold are the result of transduction of what kind of energy? What determines whether something will feel hot or cold to us? |
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Definition
Thermal. The difference between the object and our core body temperature |
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Term
What causes perceptions of pain? |
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Definition
Mechanical or thermal energy at extreme intensities. |
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Term
The region of skin that causes a change in a receptor’s firing rate is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
The most common type of receptor cell in the skin is called what? What kind of sensation is this cell type associated with? |
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Definition
Free nerve endings.
Pain. |
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Term
The term ‘mechanoreceptor’ refers to a cell that responds to what type of stimulation? |
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Definition
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Term
Pacinian corpuscles respond to what kind of stimulation? |
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Definition
onsets and offsets of pressure, but not continuous pressure |
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Term
The general term for receptors that produce pain signals is _____________. |
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Definition
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Term
The specific receptor that appears to be most closely associated with pain is the ______________. |
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Definition
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Term
For the most part, particular sensations (pressure, heat, pain) do not appear to be the result of specific types of receptors, but rather the ______________ of receptors that is activated by a stimulus. |
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Definition
Pattern and/or combination |
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Term
The representation of the body in sensory cortex is called the _________________. |
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Definition
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Term
What 3 factors determine the intensity of heat and cold perception? |
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Definition
1.)Difference between your skin temperature and the temperature of the object you are feeling 2.)Duration 3.)Area of skin that is stimulated |
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Term
Taste involves the transduction of what kind of energy? |
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Definition
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Term
There are how many so-called primary tastes? What are they? |
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Definition
4
Sweet, salty, sour, bitter |
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Term
There is another proposed primary taste, termed Umami, which is the taste of what common food additive? |
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Definition
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Term
The quality of a taste depends in a simple way on the molecular structure of a tasted chemical. True or False? |
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Definition
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Term
Although there are exceptions, carbon+water (carbohydrate) compounds usually taste __________, acidic foods generally taste __________, while basic compounds taste _______________, and alkaloid compounds taste _____________. |
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Definition
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Term
Sensitivity to the primary tastes is evenly distributed across the tongue. True or false? |
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Definition
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Term
The basis of the distribution of sensitivity to primary tastes across the tongue is not well understood, but does not appear to be the result of specific receptors for each of the primary tastes. True or false? |
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Definition
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Term
We are able to discriminate a given taste from pure (tasteless) water at a (higher, lower) threshold than we are able to identify the taste. |
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Definition
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Term
Most people are most sensitive to which of the primary tastes? |
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Definition
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Term
Non-tasters (i.e., people who are insensitive to the primary taste that most of us are most sensitive to) tend to consume more of what popular bitter beverage? |
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Definition
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Term
Supertasters will likely find broccoli (delicious, repugnant),while non-tasters typically find it (delicious, repugnant). |
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Definition
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Term
In general, as we get older, does sensitivity to taste increase or decline? |
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Definition
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Term
After tasting one chemical repeatedly (i.e., sugar), sensitivity to that chemical declines temporarily. What is this phenomenon called? |
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Definition
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Term
Sensitivity depends on many factors, including the temperature of the tastant. Generally, we are most sensitive to chemicals at (low, moderate, high) temperatures, and least sensitive to chemicals at (low, moderate, high) temperatures. |
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Definition
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Term
After tasting one chemical that stimulates one of the primary tastes repeatedly, we also become temporarily less sensitive to other chemicals that stimulate the same primary taste (i.e., saccharine after tasting sugar). This phenomenon is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
Taste preference is the result of both biological and cultural influences. In general, pleasant tastes signal what kind of substance? Unpleasant tastes signal what kind of substance? |
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Definition
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Term
The cultural influence on taste perception is so strong that some cultures abhor sweet and crave mainly bitter foods. True or false? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The selective filtering and amplification of information for further processing by a limited capacity information processing system |
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Term
Attention might work by reducing the input intensity of irrelevant stimuli. This process is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
Attention might work by boosting the input intensity of relevant information. This process is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
The previous two processes (amplification and filtering) are summarized by what concept? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the orienting response (OR)? Know its components and what kind of information causes it. |
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Definition
A response to sudden change
Components: heart rate decreases, skin conductance increases, breathing becomes for shallow, receptor organs are brought into alignment with the change |
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Term
How does Sokolov explain the OR? What does his theory say about a decrement (decrease) in the intensity of a stimulus? |
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Definition
A discrepancy between current input and your mental model A decrement should cause an orienting response |
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Term
What does the Thompson dual-process model of orienting predict in the case of a decrement in stimulus intensity? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the startle reflex? What causes it? How is it similar to the OR? How is it different? |
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Definition
A response to an intense sudden change
An intense sudden change
Breathing becomes more rapid and deeper, Heart rate increases, receptor organs close (eyes) |
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Term
What is pre-pulse inhibition? |
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Definition
A reduction in the startle reflex with a prior warning |
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Term
What is dichotic listening? |
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Definition
2 different signals, one delivered to each ear |
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Term
According to Broadbent’s filter theory of attention, what information from the unattended channel gets processed in working memory? |
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Definition
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Term
According to Treisman’s attenuation theory of attention, what information from an unattended channel will get processed in working memory? |
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Definition
Information that is already close to threshhold |
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Term
According to late selection theories, what information from unattended channels gets processed in working memory? |
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Definition
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Term
According to Neisser, does selection occur at an early or a late stage of processing? |
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Definition
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Term
According to the spotlight model of visual attention, what is the nature of the attended area of the visual field? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 3 operations of the attentional spotlight, according to Posner’s model? |
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Definition
Disengage, move, and engage |
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Term
Why is a cost to an invalid cue important in testing the spotlight model against competing models of attention? |
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Definition
The three operations take time, and that predicts the outcome |
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Term
According to the spotlight model of attention, what is the basis of visual information selection? (i.e., is it space-based or object-based?). |
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Definition
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Term
Does visual attention select information based on spatial location or object identity? |
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Definition
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Term
According to the study by Ling & Carrasco, do endogenous and exogenous attention operate via the same mechanism? |
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Definition
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Term
What effect does attention have on sensitivity to visual stimuli? |
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Definition
Decreases sensitivity to unattended regions |
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Term
What is the binding problem? |
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Definition
Features are analyzed separately but we perceive objects |
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Term
What does feature integration theory say about object binding? |
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Definition
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Term
What is an illusory conjunction? |
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Definition
A binding of features that did not exist in the environment |
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Term
Under what circumstances do illusory conjunctions most often occur? |
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Definition
When there is a lack of attention |
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Term
What is the Stroop effect? |
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Definition
It takes longer to name the color of an inconsistent color word |
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Term
What is it taken as evidence of? |
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Definition
Automaticity of word reading |
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Term
What form of energy is transduced in time perception? |
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Definition
None, time is not a form of energy |
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Term
What is the basis of our perception of intervals, according to memory set size models such as Ornstein’s model? |
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Definition
The number and complexity of cognitive operations that took place during the interval |
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Term
According to such a model, which will be perceived as longer, an empty interval or an interval in which many cognitive tasks are performed? |
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Definition
An interval with many cognitive tasks |
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Term
What is the basis of our perception of intervals, according to attentional models of time perception? |
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Definition
Attention to the interval |
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Term
According to attention models of time perception, which will be perceived as longer, an empty interval or an interval in which many cognitive tasks are performed? |
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Definition
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Term
There is evidence for both memory set size and attentional models of timing. How is the discrepancy between their predictions resolved? |
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Definition
Attentional models: prospective (participants are told beforehand that they will be judging duration)
memory models: retrospective (participants are told afterwards that they will be judging duration) |
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Term
There appears to be many candidates for a biological clock, but what is certain is that several biological variables appear to influence time perception. In general, stimulants appear to have what effect on time perception (and presumably the biological clock)? Depressants have what effect on time perception? |
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Definition
Stimulants speed up time: overestimation
Depressants slow down time: underestimation |
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Term
In general, as core body temperature increases, does the biological clock appear to run faster or slower? |
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Definition
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Term
According to Scalar Expectancy Theory (SET), the signal of the beginning of a timed interval causes a ________ to close and allow _____to pass into an ______. Our representation of time is the final count that accumulates in the ___________ [please note that two blanks have the same answer]. |
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Definition
gate
pulses
accumulator
Accumulator |
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Term
According to SET, the long-term memory representation (LTM) of a temporal interval is composed of___________ rather than a single prototype. The observation that pigeons peck and their maximal rate around the time that delayed reinforcement would be given indicates that pigeons have a representation of elapsed time. This phenomenon is demonstrated by the _______ procedure. |
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Definition
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Term
Describe the scalar property of timing. |
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Definition
Increasing variability with increasing duration |
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Term
The empirical phenomenon that the smallest difference between two intervals necessary to tell them apart increases with increasing interval duration is called ____________. |
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Definition
Just noticeable difference |
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Term
In the warning stimulus paradigm, the phenomenon that reactions are faster following a warning stimulus is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
In the warning stimulus paradigm, when foreperiods are blocked the fastest reactions occur at the _______ interval, but when foreperiods are mixed, the fastest reactions occur at the _________ interval. |
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Definition
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Term
The reason is that when foreperiods are blocked, attention is based on ________, but when foreperiods are mixed, attention is also based on _______. |
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Definition
Timing Subjective Probability |
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Term
Internal clock models (like SET) can account for attentional effects after isochronous or randomly timed stimulus sequences, but not after _________ sequences. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the three stages of sensory integration, according to most models? |
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Definition
1.) Analysis 2.) Integration 3.) Decision |
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Term
According to the Fuzzy Logical Model of Perception (FLMP), does each sensory modality have its own rule (algorithm) for integration? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens at the analysis stage, according to FLMP? |
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Definition
each feature is transformed into a value representing the degree to which it supports each alternative interpretation |
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Term
How is evidence from various stimulus features integrated, according to FLMP? |
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Definition
multiplicative combination |
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Term
The pattern classification stage of FLMP computes what? |
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Definition
a probability for each alternative |
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Term
According to signal detection theory, how are different features (cues) of a stimulus integrated to arrive at a single interpretation of the stimulus? |
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Definition
- the two (or more) distributions correspond to the two stimuli
- A decision is made independently along each stimulus dimension
- Each individual decision consists of a real value corresponding to how far the subjective perception of that dimension is from the criterion.
- Integration is achieved by simply summing these evaluations
SUMMING THE VALUES OF EACH INDEPENDENT EVALUATION |
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Term
What are the four determinants of whether two stimuli will compete with each other, be integrated, or one will be ignored for constructing a percept? |
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Definition
- Temporal proximity
- Spatial proximity
- Information consistency
- Reliability of the information source |
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Term
Scalar Expectancy Theory (SET) explained as graph |
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Definition
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