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Chapter 5: Vision


Horizontales
A condition where a person cannot tell if objects are moving or standing still.
The point at the back of the eye that has no receptors.
The "where" path.
The "what" pathway.
The colored part of the eye.
The opening in center of eye that lets light in.
One of the first discoveries in psychology; also known as colorblindness.
The number of cones necessary to account for human color vision.
Receive messages from bipolar cells.
Common result from damage in the temporal cortex. Results in an inability to recognize objects despite otherwise normal vision.
Verticales
A tiny area specialized for acute, detailed vision.
The theory that we perceive color through relative rates of response by three kinds of cones.
Impaired ability to recognize faces.
Located closer to the center of the eye, they receive messages from receptors at the back of the eye.
Chemicals that release energy when struck by light.
The rear surface of the eye; lined with visual receptors.
A type of receptor that is essential for color vision.
The ability to recognize colors despite changes in lighting.
Ganglion cell axons join to form this nerve that exits out the back of the eye.
Bleached by bright light.