Nature Reviews Neuroscience Highlight
... stimuli from that category irrespective of the amount of dog in the stimulus. Further analysis of the response properties revealed that the typical neuron was more sensitive to category than identity. Finally, the monkeys could be trained with stimuli that were assigned to a new category, illustrati ...
... stimuli from that category irrespective of the amount of dog in the stimulus. Further analysis of the response properties revealed that the typical neuron was more sensitive to category than identity. Finally, the monkeys could be trained with stimuli that were assigned to a new category, illustrati ...
Apr11
... excite letters and from letters to excite words (bottom up processing). Activation also spreads from words to the component letters (top-down processing). The more activation, the more likely the correct letter will be identified: ...
... excite letters and from letters to excite words (bottom up processing). Activation also spreads from words to the component letters (top-down processing). The more activation, the more likely the correct letter will be identified: ...
Dec9
... Instructions are either push lever if negative, pull if positive or vice versa. This is consistent with the arrangement in Chen and Bargh. The relation of the word to the self is the same as the word’s relation to the representation of the self. ...
... Instructions are either push lever if negative, pull if positive or vice versa. This is consistent with the arrangement in Chen and Bargh. The relation of the word to the self is the same as the word’s relation to the representation of the self. ...
download
... The word color is the general term which applies to the whole subject - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, black and white and all possible combinations thereof. Hue is the correct word to use to refer to just the pure spectrum colors. Any given color can be described in terms of its value an ...
... The word color is the general term which applies to the whole subject - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, black and white and all possible combinations thereof. Hue is the correct word to use to refer to just the pure spectrum colors. Any given color can be described in terms of its value an ...
Psychology (9th Edition) David Myers
... Visual Information Processing Processing of several aspects of the stimulus simultaneously is called parallel processing. The brain divides a visual scene into subdivisions such as color, depth, form, movement, etc. ...
... Visual Information Processing Processing of several aspects of the stimulus simultaneously is called parallel processing. The brain divides a visual scene into subdivisions such as color, depth, form, movement, etc. ...
2_28 - UCI Cognitive Science Experiments
... • Short SOA’s produce rapid “automatic priming” whereas the expectation of a shift is a controlled attentional process that requires more time to build up • Generally, semantic priming shows how word identification is affected by context ...
... • Short SOA’s produce rapid “automatic priming” whereas the expectation of a shift is a controlled attentional process that requires more time to build up • Generally, semantic priming shows how word identification is affected by context ...
sensation.
... Visual Information Processing Processing of several aspects of the stimulus simultaneously is called parallel processing. The brain divides a visual scene into subdivisions such as color, depth, form, movement, etc. ...
... Visual Information Processing Processing of several aspects of the stimulus simultaneously is called parallel processing. The brain divides a visual scene into subdivisions such as color, depth, form, movement, etc. ...
Vision - Ms. Fahey
... The energies we experience as visible light are a thin slice from the broad spectrum of electromagnetic energy. Our sensory experience of light is determined largely by the light energy’s wavelength, which determines the hue of a color, and its intensity, which influences brightness. After light ent ...
... The energies we experience as visible light are a thin slice from the broad spectrum of electromagnetic energy. Our sensory experience of light is determined largely by the light energy’s wavelength, which determines the hue of a color, and its intensity, which influences brightness. After light ent ...
AP Psych Vision Module 13 - Pleasantville High School
... Theories of Color Vision Trichromatic theory: Based on behavioral experiments, Helmholtz suggested that retina should contain three receptors sensitive to red, blue and green colors. Standard stimulus ...
... Theories of Color Vision Trichromatic theory: Based on behavioral experiments, Helmholtz suggested that retina should contain three receptors sensitive to red, blue and green colors. Standard stimulus ...
1. What are some major differences between
... can have both almost immediate access to subcortical sites, such as the thalamus, as well as somewhat slower access to sensory cortex. These pathways can provide the means for directing attention to unnoticed but potentially significant stimuli, such as the coiled hose mentioned above that resembled ...
... can have both almost immediate access to subcortical sites, such as the thalamus, as well as somewhat slower access to sensory cortex. These pathways can provide the means for directing attention to unnoticed but potentially significant stimuli, such as the coiled hose mentioned above that resembled ...
Stroop Task
... have been incorporated into our nervous systems through evolution because they are functional and have consequences that are better than acting randomly, or not acting at all. Emotions are ‘heuristics’. • The elicitation of emotion imposes a particular mode of organization on the nervous system, con ...
... have been incorporated into our nervous systems through evolution because they are functional and have consequences that are better than acting randomly, or not acting at all. Emotions are ‘heuristics’. • The elicitation of emotion imposes a particular mode of organization on the nervous system, con ...
Color blindness
... • Color processing begins in the retina • Trichromatic theory(Young-Helmholtz Theory): the idea that colors are sensed by three different types of cones sensitive to light in the red, blue, and green wavelengths. Explains the earliest stage of color sensation • Opponent-process theory: the idea that ...
... • Color processing begins in the retina • Trichromatic theory(Young-Helmholtz Theory): the idea that colors are sensed by three different types of cones sensitive to light in the red, blue, and green wavelengths. Explains the earliest stage of color sensation • Opponent-process theory: the idea that ...
Academic Misconduct/ Cheating policy
... Less impediment from other cells & blood vessels One to one communication with bipolar cells & ganglion cells You really do have a blind spot ...
... Less impediment from other cells & blood vessels One to one communication with bipolar cells & ganglion cells You really do have a blind spot ...
669790507205MyersMod_LG_12
... The energies we experience as visible light are a thin slice from the broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. Our sensory experience of light is determined largely by the light energy’s wavelength, which determines the hue of a color, and its intensity, which influences brightness. After light ...
... The energies we experience as visible light are a thin slice from the broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. Our sensory experience of light is determined largely by the light energy’s wavelength, which determines the hue of a color, and its intensity, which influences brightness. After light ...
chapter 3 – sensation and perception
... 4. Each taste bud contains 5. 1/10 second can 6. 4 primary 7. Sensory adaptation 8. Cross adaptation C. The Vestibular Senses 1. Equilibrium and awareness of 2. Arise inner ear and sense 3. 2 Kinds a. Body rotation b. Gravitation and movement 1) Utricle – 2) Saccule – 4. Travel on auditory nerve – D ...
... 4. Each taste bud contains 5. 1/10 second can 6. 4 primary 7. Sensory adaptation 8. Cross adaptation C. The Vestibular Senses 1. Equilibrium and awareness of 2. Arise inner ear and sense 3. 2 Kinds a. Body rotation b. Gravitation and movement 1) Utricle – 2) Saccule – 4. Travel on auditory nerve – D ...
Vision
... • How much light reaches the retina? –Controlled by the PUPIL • Dilated Pupil=DARK • Contracted Pupil=LIGHT –Pupil Dilates in the Dark to expose more light waves to the photoreceptors »Many drugs can interfere with this by acting as agonists (replicating the neurotransmitters) involved in determinin ...
... • How much light reaches the retina? –Controlled by the PUPIL • Dilated Pupil=DARK • Contracted Pupil=LIGHT –Pupil Dilates in the Dark to expose more light waves to the photoreceptors »Many drugs can interfere with this by acting as agonists (replicating the neurotransmitters) involved in determinin ...
2_Vision
... • How much light reaches the retina? –Controlled by the PUPIL • Dilated Pupil=DARK • Contracted Pupil=LIGHT –Pupil Dilates in the Dark to expose more light waves to the photoreceptors »Many drugs can interfere with this by acting as agonists (replicating the neurotransmitters) involved in determinin ...
... • How much light reaches the retina? –Controlled by the PUPIL • Dilated Pupil=DARK • Contracted Pupil=LIGHT –Pupil Dilates in the Dark to expose more light waves to the photoreceptors »Many drugs can interfere with this by acting as agonists (replicating the neurotransmitters) involved in determinin ...
Dissociative tendencies, attention, and memory
... Stroop task. The standard Stroop interference is the difference in reaction time to name an ink color that is incongruent with the word meaning (e.g., “green” appears in red ink) and to name an ink color in a baseline condition (e.g., the stimulus is a row of xs). Freyd et al. (1998) reported that p ...
... Stroop task. The standard Stroop interference is the difference in reaction time to name an ink color that is incongruent with the word meaning (e.g., “green” appears in red ink) and to name an ink color in a baseline condition (e.g., the stimulus is a row of xs). Freyd et al. (1998) reported that p ...
Vision Lecture Notes
... o feature detectors – neurons in the visual cortex that respond to specific features…edges, lines, angles and movements ...
... o feature detectors – neurons in the visual cortex that respond to specific features…edges, lines, angles and movements ...
Brown-Peterson task
... When secondary task applied (monitoring computer screen for form), performance on nonmeaningful conditions declined, but not on meaningful sentence condition Ability of EB to use meaning for bind memories allowed for excess resources in meaningful sentence condition, but resources in non-meaningful ...
... When secondary task applied (monitoring computer screen for form), performance on nonmeaningful conditions declined, but not on meaningful sentence condition Ability of EB to use meaning for bind memories allowed for excess resources in meaningful sentence condition, but resources in non-meaningful ...
Modelling the Stroop Effect: Dynamics in Inhibition of Automatic
... component (irrelevant stimulus) (ranging from 0% to 25% on-bits, with
random uniform distribution). In contrast, for a CN task, the stimulus
inherits 25% random activation from its memory, with random activation of
component (irrelevant stimulus) (ranging from 0% to 75% on-b ...
...
Stroop effect
In psychology, the Stroop effect is a demonstration of interference in the reaction time of a task. When the name of a color (e.g., ""blue"", ""green"", or ""red"") is printed in a color not denoted by the name (e.g., the word ""red"" printed in blue ink instead of red ink), naming the color of the word takes longer and is more prone to errors than when the color of the ink matches the name of the color. The effect is named after John Ridley Stroop, who first published the effect in English in 1935. The effect had previously been published in Germany in 1929. The original paper has been one of the most cited papers in the history of experimental psychology, leading to more than 701 replications. The effect has been used to create a psychological test (Stroop test) that is widely used in clinical practice and investigation.