sensory memory
Sensory memory
Having pain receptors sensitive to all stimuli helps to quickly detect potential threats to the body, allowing for faster response and protection. This sensitivity ensures that no harmful stimuli go unnoticed, helping to prevent further damage or injury. Additionally, it provides a more comprehensive and accurate representation of what type of injury or danger the body is experiencing.
When a person is responding to non-existent stimuli (environment) and/or not responding to existent (present environment) stimuli. In other words, a person is interacting with 'something that is not there' or not interacting with their environment that is definitely present.
A jellyfish stings when receives particular stimuli, like the presence of food.
John B. Watson
Directional stimuli are environmental stimuli, particularly light and sound, that the direction of which it comes and the direction of the response to the stimulus are of upmost importance. Non-directional stimuli are those where receptors do not detect the direction from which they come. Chemical stimuli are usually not directional.
Memory capacity
Sensory System
A stimuli or stimulus is a change in an organisms surroundings that provokes a response from the organism.
"Input" influence a person's communication such stimuli, both past and present, that give us our information about the world.
"Input" influence a person's communication such stimuli, both past and present, that give us our information about the world.
The plural for stimulus is stimuli.