Understanding Vision Processes in Psychology
60 likes | 155 Vues
Explore the parallel processes of vision, effects of visual cortex damage, and color theory. Dive into the intricacies of the visual cortex, light wavelengths, and color vision mechanisms.
Understanding Vision Processes in Psychology
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Mod 12 Quiz AP Psychology
Which of the following is not one of the parallel processes of vision? • A. degree • B. form • C. color • D. motion • E. depth
Which of the following can occur as a result of damage to a small area of the visual cortex? • I. the patient can lose the ability to track movement • II. The patient can lose the ability to reintegrate details of an object into a whole object (ie seeing stars and stripes, but not the flag) • III. The patient can lose the ability to recognize faces • IV. The patient can lose the ability to see in one particular spot (ie develop a blind spot • V. the patient can develop the ability to integrate unrelated objects into a larger whole (ie flag, soldier, gun = war) • A. I only • B. I and II only • C. II and III only • D. II, III, and IV only • E. III, IV and V only
The visual cortex • A. interprets electrical signals traveling to it from the optic nerve • B. flips the eyes’ images • C. is directly behind both eyes • D. is located in the temporal lobe • E. is relativelly small and simple
The wavelength of light determines • A. intensity • B. hue • C. brightness • D. form • E. features
Color vision involves • A. light hitting the cones of the eyes and either triggering or inhibiting specific neurons • B. light hitting rods and being reflected onto the brain • C. light hitting the cornea and traveling to the optic nerve • D. light hitting the blind spot and being interpreted by the brain • E. light hitting the lens and reflecting onto the cornea