A. Hearing
B. Accommodation
C. Parallel processing
D. The vestibular sense
Sensation And Perception
Sensation And Perception
A. 1250 to be noticed
B. 1200 to be noticed
C. 1010 to be noticed
D. 1100 to be noticed
A. Diminishing sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus
B. Adjustment in the opening of the eye
C. The process by which stimulus energies are changed into neural impulses
D. Changes in the shape of the lens as it focuses on objects
A. Additive color mixing
B. Opponent-process theory
C. Additive color mixing
D. Trichromatic theory
A. Parallel processing
B. Feature detectors
C. Sensory adaptation
D. Visual acuity
A. Color constancy
B. Sensory interaction
C. The rubber-hand illusion
D. Phantom limb sensations
A. Temporal lobe
B. Cochlea
C. Oval window
D. Stirrup
A. Complementary color theory
B. Trichromatic theory
C. Opponent-process theory
D. Saturation theory
A. Poor vision in bright light
B. No color vision
C. Poor vision in low illumination
D. More accurate depth perception
A. Sensory interaction; feature detection
B. Sensation; perception
C. Absolute threshold; difference threshold
D. The just noticeable difference; accommodation