Thursday, November 29, 2018

Day 33

Learning Targets:  
  • Students will be able to describe the structure and function of the 5 basic senses and how these processes influence human behavior.
  • Students will be able to understand the impact of perception on the influence of behavior.
Opener:  What is on the tip of your tongue?  Have you ever disagreed with someone about how something tastes?

Activity #1:  Mini - Lecture


  • Our ability to taste begins at the taste receptors on the tongue. 
    • The tongue detects six different taste sensations: sweet, salty, sour, bitter, piquancy (spicy), and umami (savory)
  • Our tongues are covered with taste buds, which are designed to sense chemicals in the mouth.
    • Most taste buds are located in the top outer edges of the tongue, but there are also receptors at the back of the tongue as well as on the walls of the mouth and at the back of the throat.
  • Human tongues are covered with 2,000 to 10,000 taste buds, and each bud contains between 50 and 100 taste receptor cells. 
    • Taste buds are activated very quickly; a salty or sweet taste that touches a taste bud for even one-tenth of a second will trigger a neural impulse 
  • On average, taste buds live for about five days, after which new taste buds are created to replace them. 
    • As we get older, however, the rate of creation decreases, making us less sensitive to taste. 
  • The area of the sensory cortex that responds to taste is in a very similar location to the area that responds to smell


Activity #2:  Provide a hypothesis for each of the following questions below regarding taste as one of the 5 senses.  Remember that this should be a claim that can be measured through experimentation and quantifiable data.


  1. Why might younger children be such picky eaters?
  2. Why might younger children be so attracted to sugary foods?
  3. To what extent does our sense of smell influence what we like to eat?
Activity #3:  Identify the scientific method components of ONE the research study linked below: 

Obesity and your taste buds.


Eating with your eyes
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181015163157.htm

Bitter taste and cancer
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/07/180718104740.htm

Close:  Live Q&A Here: 

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Day 32

Learning Targets:  
  • Students will be able to describe the structure and function of the 5 basic senses and how these processes influence human behavior.
  • Students will be able to understand the impact of perception on the influence of behavior.
Opener:  What is the absolute threshold for sounds?


Image result for decibel rating familiar sounds


Activity #1:  Sensation vs Perception 

Difference Threshold - The minimum amount of difference that can be detected between stimuli

Signal Detection Theory - Theory that states that other variables in your setting influence how we process signal stimuli






The Ear

Pitch - The variance in sound waves that determines how high or low the sound. 

Loudness - measured in decibels, this is the amplitude of the soundwave

Auditory Nerve - Sends neural impulses to the brain based upon the movement and vibrations of fluids in the cochlea.


Label the following on your diagrams:

Ear
Ear Canal
Eardrum
Hammer
Anvil
Stirrup
Cochlea
Auditory Nerve
Eustachian Tube

Eye
Cornea
Pupil
Lens
Iris
Retina
Optic Nerve
Photoreceptors
Blind Spot

Activity #2:  Read the short article linked down below about the implications of hearing loss.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-i-hear/201302/more-noise-more-hearing-loss-more-isolation

1.  What are 3 of the social and/or psychological consequences of hearing loss?
2.  What is the "iPod Effect"?
3.  How might hearing loss be connected to dimentia?

Close:  Live Q&A Here: 

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Day 31

Learning Targets:  

  • Students will be able to describe the structure and function of the 5 basic senses and how these processes influence human behavior.
  • Students will be able to understand the impact of perception on the influence of behavior.
Opener:  Which two of your senses are you most reliant upon for typical day-to-day tasks?  Quick Write:  Describe a day in your life without those two senses.

Activity #1:


Questions to answer:

1.  How do people compensate for lost senses?
2.  How might you compensate for losing the two senses that you listed above? 

Activity #2:  Sensation/Perception Introduction


Sensation — awareness resulting from the stimulation of a sense organ 
Perception — the organization and interpretation of sensations
Psychophysics - the branch of psychology that studies the effects of physical stimuli on sensory perceptions and mental states.
Absolute threshold - the intensity of a stimulus that allows an organism to just barely detect it.

Close:  Live Q&A Here: 

Monday, November 5, 2018

Day 28-29

Learning Targets:
  • Describe the continuum of consciousness
  • Analyze the cultural perspective of drug use and consciousness
  • Describe the stages of sleep, function of sleep and sleep disorders
  • Compare the theories of dreaming
  • Describe the theories of hypnosis
Opener - Examine the table and definitions below to determine which methodology will work best for answering your hypothesis.

Descriptive researchcase studiessurveys, and observation
Correlational research involves the measurement of two or more relevant variables and an assessment of the relationship between those variables.
Experimental research an experiment where the researcher determines and/or controls  the independent variable (or variables) and the dependent variable

Activity #1 - Make a template:

Using Google Doc's, or Microsoft Office, make a preliminary template for your proposed research that you can use to gather, sort, or analyze data.  This may include one or more of the following:

- Identify what you will attempt to describe in a case study
- Make a list of questions that you will ask in a survey
- Design a checklist for observable behaviors
- List the variable(s) you intend to manipulate or measure in an experiment

For example, you can make a checklist on a Google or Microsoft spreadsheet that would measure each time you observe a behavior or record a response, OR use Google or Microsoft documents and design your survey questionnaire.

Activity #2 - Ethics Check.  Read the short article linked below in order to complete each of the statements below in your notebook:

https://www.verywellmind.com/conducting-ethical-research-in-psychology-2795184

1.  Participation in your study must be ___________.
2.  As the researcher, you must first obtain ____________   ______________ from each potential participant in your study.
3.  Participants must be informed of any potential ____________.
4.  You must ensure that you maintain participant ____________ by not sharing details of individual responses.

Word Bank
Risks, Voluntary, Confidentiality, Informed Consent

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