100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
TEST BANK FOR SENSATION AND PERCEPTION 10TH EDITION BY E. BRUCE GOLDSTEIN| REVISED 100% CORRECT ANSWERS (INCLUDES ESSAY QUESTIONS) $22.99   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

TEST BANK FOR SENSATION AND PERCEPTION 10TH EDITION BY E. BRUCE GOLDSTEIN| REVISED 100% CORRECT ANSWERS (INCLUDES ESSAY QUESTIONS)

3 reviews
 1323 views  12 purchases
  • Course
  • Sensation and Perception
  • Institution
  • Sensation And Perception

***Download Test Bank Immediately After the Purchase. Just in case you have trouble downloading, kindly message me, and I will send it to you via Google Doc or email. Thank you*** Table of Content 1. Introduction to Perception. 2. The Physiological Beginnings of Perception. 3. Neural Processing...

[Show more]
Last document update: 11 months ago

Preview 6 out of 145  pages

  • December 14, 2023
  • December 15, 2023
  • 145
  • 2023/2024
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • perception 10th editi
book image

Book Title:

Author(s):

  • Edition:
  • ISBN:
  • Edition:
  • Sensation and Perception
  • Sensation and Perception

3  reviews

review-writer-avatar

By: antoinelarbell • 1 month ago

review-writer-avatar

By: DrMurphy • 3 months ago

review-writer-avatar

By: TutorJay • 5 months ago

avatar-seller
PureGold
1 TEST BANK FOR SENSATION AND PERCEPTION 10TH EDITION BY E. BRUCE GOLDSTEIN REVISE D 100% CORRECT ANSWERS (INCLUDES ESSAY QUESTIONS ) Test Bank—Chapter 1: Introduction to Perception MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. “Perceiving machines” that can negotiate the environment with humanlike ease a. were developed by computer scientists in the 1960s. b. were developed by computer scientists in the 1970s. c. were developed by computer scientists in the 1990s. d. have yet to be developed. ANS: D 2. Which of the following is an applicati on of perception research? a. Developing speech recognition systems. c. Devising robots that can “see.” b. Treating hearing problems. d. All of these. ANS: D 3. Which of the following is a reason for studying perception? a. To become more aware of your own perce ptual experiences. b. To provide information that may help with a future career. c. To apply perception to everyday problems, such as highway sign visibility. d. All of these. ANS: D 4. The study of perception can overlap with a. medicine. c. philosophy. b. computer scienc e. d. all of these. ANS: D 5. Which of the following is NOT a category of the stages in the perceptual process? a. Stimuli c. Serendipity b. Neural Processing d. Behavioral Responses 2 ANS: C 6. The process of transforming energy in the environment into electrical energy in the neurons is called a. refraction. c. reduction. b. transduction. d. construction. ANS: B 7. is the step in the perceptual process that is analogous to an ATM withdrawal (pressure from button press becomes electrical energy then becomes a mechanica l response resulting in the dispensing of money). a. Knowledge c. Action b. Transference d. Transduction ANS: C 8. The specific term for the “stimulus on the receptors” in visual processing is the a. transduced image. c. visual image. b. environmental stimulus. d. perception. ANS: C 9. The image projected on the retina is best described as a of the actual stimulus. a. representation. c. replication. b. environmental stimulus. d. scale model. ANS: A 10. Which brain structure is responsible for creating perceptions and producing other “high” level functions such as language, memory, and thinking? a. Brain stem c. Hypothalamus b. Cerebral cortex d. Occipital lobe ANS: B 11. Visual form agnosia is a problem of the step of the perceptual process. a. action c. transduction b. attention d. Recogniti on ANS: D 12. Which of the following best describes the steps of the perceptual process? a. The steps are unidirectional, starting at the environmental stimulus and ending at perception. 3 b. The steps are unidirectional, starting at the environmental stimulus and ending at knowledge. c. The steps are unidirectional, starting at transduction and ending at recognition. d. The sequence of steps is dynamic and constantly changing. ANS: D 13. If a person sees the unambiguous “rat” stimulus, and then views the ambiguous “rat-man” figure, the person will most likely report seeing a. a rat, because of the effect of knowledge. b. a man, because we tend to see things that match our species. c. a rat, because of the effect of action. d. a rat or a man equally. ANS: A 14. Justin forgot to wear his glas ses to class so the writing he sees on the chalk board is blurry. Even so, he is sure it says “Pop Quiz!” because he knows that there are pop quizzes in the class and he can see read the “P” and the “Q”. What allows him to read the board? a. Bottom -up process ing c. Top-down processing b. Oblique processing d. Compression ANS: C 15. processing is based on the stimuli reaching the receptors. a. Bottom -up c. Top-down b. Oblique d. Receptor ANS: A 16. Trying to read a note written by someone with poor handwriting involves a. only top-down processing. b. only bottom -up processing. c. both top-down and bottom -up processing. d. only data-based processing. ANS: C 17. The physiological level of analysis involves the relationship between a. stimulus -and-physiology. b. physiology -and-perception. c. stimulus -and-perception. d. both stimulus -and-physiology and physiology -and-perception. ANS: D 18. Kimmy is casting shadows on the wall and watching whether her cat Tiger jumps at the 4 shadows or not. She uses different hand motions to see if there is a difference in whether Tiger jumps or not. Kimmy is informally studying which relationship? a. the stimulus -physiology relationship c. the stimulus -perception relationship b. the physiology -perception relationship d. all of these ANS: C 19. Cognitive influences affect the level of analysis. a. physiological c. both physiological and psychophysical b. psychophysical d. neither physiological and psychophysical ANS: C 20. The psychophysical method in which stimuli of varying intensities are presented in ascending and descending orders in disc rete steps is called the method of a. limits. c. searching. b. constant stimuli. d. scaling. ANS: A 21. When using the method of limits, the absolute threshold is determined by calculating a. the stimulus intensity detected 50% of the time. b. the stimulus intensity detected 75% of the time. c. the stimulus intensity detected 100% of the time. d. the average of the “cross -over” points. ANS: D 22. The difference between the method of limits and the method of adjustment is that, in the method of adjustment, stimulus intensity is ch anged in a manner. a. stepwise c. continuous b. bivariate d. Discrete ANS: C 23. Of the three classical psychophysical methods, the method of constant stimuli a. is most accurate, but takes the most amount of time. b. is least accurate, but is the fastest. c. is the fastes t and most accurate method. d. is the least accurate and takes the most amount of time. ANS: A 24. As used in the textbook, the “DL” is the abbreviation for a. detection level. c. descending limit. b. differenze limen. d. determinant logarithm. 5 ANS: B 25. Using Weber’ s Law, if the DL for a 100 gram weight standard is 2 grams, then the DL when using a 200 gram standard would be grams. a. 0.02 c. 4 b. 2 d. 50 ANS: C 26. The Weber’s fraction for electric shock is , and for light intensity. a. 0.01; 0.08 c. 0.02; 0.02 b. 0.08; 0.01 d. 0.08; 0.08 ANS: A 27. The “S” in the Weber fraction stands for: a. sensation c. standard stimulus b. synapse d. Somatic ANS: A 28. Demetri is a participant in an auditory detection study using the method of constant stimuli. He never detects the 10 unit tone. He detects the 20 unit tone 25% of the trials. He detects the 30 unit tone 50% of the trials. He detects the 40 unit tone 80% of the trials. He detects the 50 unit tone 95% of the trials. His threshold for hearing tones would be taken as the a. 15 unit tone. c. 30 unit tone. b. 20 unit tone. d. 55 unit tone. ANS: C 29. A soup company wants to develop a “reduced -salt” version of their traditional minestrone. Which of the following would be the best first step to take? a. find taste-testers who have agnosia b. measure the amount of “cross -talk” using the method of adjustment c. determine the absolute threshold for salty taste using the method of limits d. determine the Weber’s fraction for salty taste ANS: D 30. Which of the following methods are used to measure the quantitative relationship between the stimulus and perception? a. description c. reflection b. the phenomenological method d. classical psychophysical methods 6 ANS: D 31. Fechner’s psychophysical methods a. are important from a historical perspective, but are no longer used in contem porary research. b. were developed in the early 1960s. c. showed that mental activity cannot be measured quantitatively. d. are currently used to test a person’s hearing and vision. ANS: A 32. The first step in the procedure for is to present the participant a “stan dard stimulus” and assign a numerical value to that stimulus. a. the method of limits c. the method of adjustment b. the method of constant stimuli d. magnitude estimation ANS: D 33. Response in a magnitude estimation experiment when doubling the stimulus intensit y LESS than doubles the subjective magnitude of the stimulus. a. accretion c. regression b. compression d. Expansion ANS: B 34. To double the perceived brightness of a light, you need to multiply the physical intensity of the light by about 9. This is an example of response a. compression. c. linearity. b. expansion. d. inversion. ANS: A 35. Stevens’s Power Law is so named because a. it is the best psychophysical law that has ever been theorized. b. the law explains why electrical power in the brain is responsible for perceptio n. c. it explains how electrical signals in the retina are involved in transduction. d. the stimulus intensity is raised to a specific exponent to predict perceived magnitude. ** (page 16 -17; conceptual) ANS: D 36. Stevens’s Power Law a. accurately describes vision, but not any other modality. b. accurately describes audition and vision, but not the skin senses.

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller PureGold. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $22.99. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

73216 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$22.99  12x  sold
  • (3)
  Add to cart