Intro to Sensory Systems

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  • Created by: Elyseee
  • Created on: 22-02-22 11:48

Action

Motor activities such as moving the head or the eyes, and locomoting through the environment. Action is one of the major outcomes of the perceptual process.

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Action potential

Rapid increase in positive charge in a nerve fiber (axon) that travels down the fiber. Also called nerve impulse or spike.

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Afferent neurons

Neuronsthatcarryaction potentialsfrom receptorsin thesensoryorgans
towards the central nervous system.

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Auditory perception

The sense of “hearing”,one of the five traditional senses.

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Bottom-up processing

Processing that is based on stimulation of the receptors. Also called data-based processing. The antonym is top-down processing.

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Efferent neurons

Neuronsthatcarryaction potentialsaway from the central nervous system to effectors such as muscles.

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Environmental stimulus

The stimulusout there, in the external environment.

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Dualism

A major philosophical approach stating thatthe mind has an existence
separate from the material world of the body. Dualists argue that mind and
brain are two separate phenomena.

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Gustatory perception

The sense of“tasting”, one of the fivetraditional senses.

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Homunculus

A map-like representation of regions of the body in the brain.

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Materialism

A major philosophical approach statingthat the only thing that exists is matter, and that all things, including the mind and consciousness, are the result of interaction between bits of matter. Materialists argue that mind and brain are both physical mediums.

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Neuron

One of two cell typesin the nervous system(along with the glial cells). Neurons areresponsibleforprocessingsensory,motor,cognitive,andaffective information.

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Olfactory perception

The sense ofsmelling”, one of the five traditional senses.

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Perception

The organization, identification, and interpretation of sensory information in order to represent, understand, and interact with the environment.

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Primary receiving areas

Areas of the cerebral cortex thatare first toreceive most of the signals initiated by a sense’s receptors. For example, the occipital cortex is the site of the primary receiving area for vision, and the temporal lobe is the site of the primary receiving area for hearing.

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Receptive field

A neuron’s receptive field is the area on the receptor surface (e.g., the retina
for vision or the skin for touch) that, when stimulated, affects the firing of that neuron.

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Receptor

A sensory receptor is a cell sensitive to environmental energy. Receptors
change this energy into electrical signals in the nervous system.

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Recognition

Theability to place an object in acategory that gives it meaningfor example, recognizing a particular red object as a tomato or giving a physical sound a semantic meaning.

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Sensory organs

Specialized organsthat interact with environmental stimuli and that contain
receptors that transduce a specific type of stimulus energy into nerve activity (e.g., the eye in vision or the skin in touch).

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Sensory systems

The partsof the nervous system,which areresponsible for processing sensory information (e.g., the somatosensory system is a sensory system).

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Tactile perception

The sense of “touching”,one of the five traditional senses.

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Top-down processing

Processing that starts with the analysis of high-level information, such as
knowledge a person brings to a situation. Also called knowledge-based
processing. Distinguished from bottom-up, or data-based processing, which is based on incoming data.

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Topographic maps

The ordered projection of a sensory surface (e.g.,the retina or the skin)or an effector system (e.g., the musculature) to one or more structures of the central nervous system. Topographic maps can be found in all sensory systems and in many motor systems.

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Transduce

A“device” that converts a signalin one form of energy to another form of
energy.

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Transduction

In the senses, theconversionof environmental energy into electrical energy.
For example, receptors in the eye transduce light energy into electrical energy.

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Visual perception

The sense of “seeing”,one of the five traditional senses.

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