here are a few that i have done not sure on weather they are right but just what i have taken from the notes
Question 1: Which of the following best describes the platonic view of vision and the world?
- view of Plato, which I interpret as there being a 'real world' but our mortal senses are only capable of sampling a small subsection of that world - the ‘shadows on a cave wall’ analogy
Question 2: which of the following is the alternate view which is illustrated in the writing of Friedrich Nietzsche
- View as Construction
- “The ‘apparent world’ and the ‘true world’ means - ‘the world’ and, ‘nothing’.” Friedrich Nietzsche
Question 3: The world we visually sense is entirely dependent on
The presence and pattern of light reflected off objects
Question 4: Excitation refers to:
An act of irritation or stimulation or of responding to a stimulus, the addition of energy, as the excitation of a molecule by absorption of photons.
Question 5: Sensation refers to...
An impression, or the consciousness of an impression, made upon the central nervous organ, through the medium of a sensory or afferent nerve or one of the organs of sense; a feeling, or state of consciousness, whether agreeable or disagreeable, produced either by an external object (stimulus), or by some change in the internal state of the body.
Question 6: At what stage in the visual pathway is an action potential first generated?
In the ganglion cells of the retina
Question 7: What do L, M and S denote when applied to cones?
Long, Medium and Short Wavelengths
Question 22: Taken as a population, primary visual cortical (v1) neurons have what critical property
- Represent everything that you are able to see as all visual input to the cortex enters at this point, it still represents the data information in a fairly general way; the output of individual neurones at this level is not yet very specialised.
- Information is separated from here into the later visual corticals which are more specialised
Question 26: The visual system appears to dissociate motion-signals elicited by eye movements or from retinal movement by:
- The visual cortex distinguishes between the action motion and the movement of the eye as the cells that signal the movement are incorporated into the signal detection
- Retinal motion is initially detected by an ensemble of motion detectors
- This is distinct from motion elicited by eye movements and the system has to deal with and account for both
Question 28: Place theory in hearing refers to...
- The physical location of stimulation on the basilar membrane signals the frequency of stimulation but in the form of a travelling wave
- Membrane properties altered physically by outer hair cells
- The frequency to space mapping on the basilar membrane provides the initial means
of frequency coding (place theory)
Question 30: “Adaptation” refers to...
- (ophthalmology)
o The ability of the eye to adjust to various light intensities by regulating the pupil of the quantity of light entering the eye.
- (neurology)
o The decline in the frequency of firing of a neuron, particularly of a receptor, to changed, constantly applied environmental conditions
Feel free to correct any answers if they are wrong 
Really need help on 39,48,8, 10 and 12 
You mentioned about question 48? Well...Our experience of reality is subjective and is a produce of our sense. It's the transduction of energy that converts into forms where we can use internally and make sense of it. Reality is not a reflection of the world - but is a constructive process.
Here are some notes to the questions on the sample paper with references to the lectures
1. Which of the following best describes the Platonic view of vision and the world?
Lecture 13/Commentary 1: Plato claims that there is a ‘real’ world, but our moral senses are only capable of sampling a small subsection of that world
2. Which of the following is the alternative view which is illustrated in the writing of Friedrich Nietzsche?
Lecture 13/Commentary 1: There is no ‘real world,’ only the world in our heads. He claims that each individual’s brain creates the world that we perceive from our input, therefore there is vast variation of interpretations within individuals.. We construct our own reality
3. The world that we visually sense is entirely dependent upon…
Lecture 14/15: The retina is the only contact we have to the external world. At the retina, it works out the colour and brightness of an image, and then adds in form, structure, motion and depth. Using the information given from the retina and a light source, the photoreceptors reconstructs this. As it is a constructive process – everyone interprets thins in different ways. It absorbs photons.
14. The term “Opponency” refers to…
Lecture 15: Human visual system interprets information about colour by processing signals from cones and rods. L for long, M for medium and S for shot, and some wavelengths of light overlap so it’s more efficient for the visual system to record differences between the responses of cone, so it is more efficient for the visual system to record differences between the responses of cones, rather than each type of cones responses. Colour is catergorised as red, yellow, blue or green.
15. Why, when considering the processing of the neural signal, is the actual physical location of any visual neuron other than the photoreceptors, arbitrary?
Commentary 2: The actual physical located of visual neuron doesn’t matter, because all receptive fields in the visual system have some relationship to the same x, y, t space that constitutes the axes of the visual input, but they sit in various places within visual pathway – mostly at the back of the head.
Photoreceptors are our only link to the visual world. Once the photoreceptors have encoded the relevant information, it doesn’t make any difference where that information is processed.
17. What is meant by the term “retinotopic mapping”?
Lecture 19: 2 neuron that receive input from adjacent group of photoreceptors will be adjacent in cortex – xy map of retina early in visual system is maintained throughout. V1, there are columns that contain every neuron you will need for that bit of the world. One specialized in colour, motion, form.
20. The idea of modularity in visual processing refers to…
Lecture 19: More efficient to analyse input in modules in parallel than it is to do it serially. Form, motion, colour and depth are processed separately to some degree. Each area is retiontopically organised – each has a full spatial map of visual field.
21. What reason may you have for questioning the assumption that the LGN is just a relay station for signals traveling from the retina to the cortex?
Lecture 19: There are more connections carrying signals from the cortex back to the LGN than from the LGN to the cortex
22. Taken as a population, primary visual cortical (v1) neurons have what critical property?
Lecture 19: Represents every aspect of the image that we can see, but in a sparse fashion (not very specialized). Receptive fields are selective rudimentary properties of colour, motion, depth and form. From here, information is transmitted to visual corticals that are more specialized.
24. What is red?
Lecture 14: We have a very unique sensation for this very simple visual stimulus. It is uniquely definable in terms of wavelength of photon and something that is impossible to describe what the sensation is – therefore we have created terms to describe it.
28. “Place theory” in hearing refers to…
Lecture 22: The frequency to space mapping on the basilar membrane provides the initial means of frequency coding.
29. “Frequency theory” in hearing refers to…
Lecture 22: The physical location of stimulation on the basilar membrane signals the frequency of stimulation but in the form of a travelling wave – membrane properties altered physically by outer hair cells.
40. The theoretical hierarchy established by David Marr is…
Lecture 19: An informational processing system where there are 3 ways to approach a problem. Define the problem clearly than look for solution, then look for implementation. Do not limit yourself when you might not know everything about the problem.
41. “Retino-cortical expansion” refers to…
Lecture 19: There are more cortical neurons dedicated to figure what’s going on in the visual field.
42. The two most likely kinds of motion detector in the human visual system are called…
Lecture 17: (1) Came from fly and betel psychophysics – capture a fly, stick it on a device and responds by thinking where motion is. (2) Spatiotemporal gradient. Either us humans have the same visual system as flies, or we have both that and spatiotemporal gradient.
47. What critical neural interaction is affected by, among other things, hallucinogenic drugs?
Lecture 21: Hallucinogenic drugs increases the amount of serotonin in the body, which increases cortical activity to reduce the inhibition os signals (therefore a lot of information is entering perception)
And still working my way through these other questions Q8, 10, 12, 19, 22, 25, 27, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 39, 43, 45, 50...