light
Some words that rhyme with "cumulus" include "stimulus," "humulus," and "promulus."
do high cholesterol affect your eye sight
night sight
long eye sight is like standing on the edge of the lake and being able to see something or someone on the other side while near sight is like reading a book.
light sight
example your mouth waters at sight of raw mangoes. it is called responsiveness to stimulus
It's a response to the visual stimulus.
This is a response, specifically a reflexive response known as salivation. The sight or smell of food triggers the brain to send signals to the salivary glands, causing the mouth to water in preparation for eating.
An unconditioned stimulus UCS is stimuli or anything that brings out a reaction that is innate, not learned, automatic, etc.A conditioned stimulus CS is a once neutral or unrelated stimulus that has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus, which after training and learning signals the conditioned response.Take a dog for example. A dog will salivate at the sight of food, salivation is the unconditioned stimulus, dogs don't learn how to drool they just do. Then pair the sight of food with the ringing of a bell, once unrelated, and the dog will learn to associate the bell with food and will therefore salivate. And the bell becomes the conditioned stimulus.For more information/source go to Exploring Psychology by David Myers
The stimulus for saliva production is usually the smell, sight, or taste of food, which activates the salivary glands. The response is the secretion of saliva into the mouth to facilitate the process of chewing and swallowing food.
They react in same way most animals do. They respond to any stimulus. The stimulus can be touch, smell, sight etc... Blue Whales are likely to not to respond to same things as humans such as touch but still react to stimulus. An example being swimming deeper when a boat is near by.
The same way hearing teachers do, by sight. The vast majority of stimulus we receive is visual. We rely on our other senses to compensate for what cannot be seen or what is not typically in our field of view, but the sense we rely on the most is sight.
It's not easy to be sure what is meant here. The sight organ is the eye, and the sound organ is the ear, but these are sense organs, i.e. they contain receptors. The larynx makes sound, and this could be classed as an effector if you shout in response to a stimulus, but you can't really think of sight in this way.
'Stimulus' is the correct spelling.
The difference between an external stimulus and an internal stimulus is that an external stimulus is a stimulus that comes from outside an organism. But an internal stumulus is a stimulus that comes from inside an organism. An example for an external stimulus can be that when you are cold, you put on a jacket. An example for an internal stimulus is that when you feel hungry, you eat food.
The characteristics are modality (type of stimulus), intensity (strength of stimulus), duration (length of stimulus), and location (where the stimulus occurred).
A stimulus is a force that produces a reaction in the subject. Humans have a number of receptors (senses) to recognize their surroundings. Balance is one, sight, hearing, touch are all obvious ones.