Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research and Everyday Experience, 3rd Edition
Reaching for a Cup: The Interaction Between Perceiving and Taking Action • 71 the fl owers and other objects on the table (Figur ...
72 • CHAPTER 3 Perception Ungerleider and Mishkin presented monkeys with two tasks: (1) an object dis- crimination problem and ( ...
Reaching for a Cup: The Interaction Between Perceiving and Taking Action • 73 other involving the parietal lobe, is neuropsychol ...
74 • CHAPTER 3 Perception These results for D.F. demonstrate a single dissociation, which indi- cates that judging orientation a ...
Something to Consider • 75 Something to Consider Mirror Neurons We not only take action ourselves, but we regularly watch other ...
76 • CHAPTER 3 Perception respond to sounds that are associated with actions. These neurons, also in the premotor cortex, called ...
THINK ABOUT IT CHAPTER SUMMARY The example of Crystal running on the beach and having coffee later illustrates how perception c ...
78 • CHAPTER 3 Perception ● FIGURE 3.42 Is a giant hand about to pick up the horse? Kristin Durr If You WANT TO KNOW MORE “Top- ...
MEDIA RESOURCES Key TERMS Action pathway, 74 Algorithm, 62 Audiovisual mirror neuron, 76 Bottom-up processing, 50 Brain ablation ...
Attention Our environment contains countless stimuli that are competing for our attention. We pay attention to some of these sti ...
81 Location-Based Attention Selective Attention as Filtering DEMONSTRATION: Focusing on One Message METHOD: Dichotic Listening C ...
82 • CHAPTER 4 Attention Is it possible to focus attention on just one thing, even when there are lots of other things going on ...
Selective Attention • 83 Selective Attention Psychologists’ early interest in selective attention is vividly illustrated by the ...
84 • CHAPTER 4 Attention DEMONSTRATION Focusing on One Message Enlist the help of two people. Select two books on diff erent top ...
Selective Attention • 85 Sensory memory holds all of the incoming information for a fraction of a second and then transfers all ...
86 • CHAPTER 4 Attention This occurred because they were taking the mean- ing of the words into account. (An example of top-down ...
Selective Attention • 87 unattended ear. For example, as the participants were shadowing “They were throwing stones at the bank, ...
88 • CHAPTER 4 Attention available for processing other stimuli that may be present. This can occur even if the person does not ...
Selective Attention • 89 Stroop Eff ect stimuli. The fl anker stimulus is presented off to the side. In the examples shown in ● ...
90 • CHAPTER 4 Attention How was the dichotic listening procedure used to determine how well people can focus on the attended m ...
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