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Sensation & Perception Chapters 5&6.

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Presentation on theme: "Sensation & Perception Chapters 5&6."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sensation & Perception Chapters 5&6

2 Sensation Sensation a process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energy Perception a process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events

3 Sensation Bottom-Up Processing Top-Down Processing
analysis that begins with the sense receptors and works up to the brain’s integration of sensory information Top-Down Processing information processing guided by higher-level mental processes as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations

4 Sensation- Basic Principles
Psychophysics study of the relationship between physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological experience of them Light- brightness Sound- volume Pressure- weight Taste- sweetness

5 Sensation- Thresholds
Absolute Threshold minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus usually defined as the stimulus needed for detection 50% of the time Difference Threshold minimum difference between two stimuli that a subject can detect 50% of the time just noticeable difference (JND) increases with magnitude

6 Sensation- Thresholds
Signal Detection Theory predicts how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise) assumes that there is no single absolute threshold detection depends partly on person’s experience expectations motivation level of fatigue

7 Sensation- Thresholds
25 50 75 100 Low Absolute threshold Medium Intensity of stimulus Percentage of correct detections Subliminal stimuli When stimuli are detectable less than 50% of the time (below one’s absolute threshold) they are “subliminal”.

8 Receptors Environmental information (stimuli) exist in many forms:
Air vibrations, gases, chemicals, tactile pressures The body receives these forms through specialized cells: Receptor cells E.g., taste buds

9 Receptors Receptor sensitivity is subject to change Sensory adaptation
Decline in receptor activity when stimuli are unchanging E.g., noticing a bad smell at first

10 Receptors Habituation
Decline in sensory sensitivity at neural level due to repeated stimulation Different from adaptation since responsiveness can reappear if stimulation level increases or decreases

11 Vision- Stabilized Images on the Retina

12 Vision Transduction- conversion of one form of energy to another
Wavelength- the distance from the peak of one wave to the peak of the next Hue- dimension of color determined by wavelength of light Intensity- amount of energy in a wave determined by amplitude brightness loudness

13 Vision- Spectrum of Electromagnetic Energy

14 Vision- Physical Properties of Waves
Short wavelength=high frequency (bluish colors, high-pitched sounds) Long wavelength=low frequency (reddish colors, low-pitched sounds) Great amplitude (bright colors, loud sounds) Small amplitude (dull colors, soft sounds)

15 Vision Pupil- adjustable opening in the center of the eye
Iris- a ring of muscle that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening Lens- transparent structure behind pupil that changes shape to focus images on the retina

16 Vision

17 Vision Accommodation Retina change in shape of lens focus near objects
inner surface of eye light sensitive contains rods and cones layers of neurons beginning of visual information processing

18 Vision Acuity- the sharpness of vision Nearsightedness Farsightedness
nearby objects seen more clearly lens focuses image of distant objects in front of retina Farsightedness faraway objects seen more clearly lens focuses near objects behind retina

19 Vision Farsighted Nearsighted Normal Vision Vision Vision

20 Retina’s Reaction to Light- Receptors
Cones near center of retina (fovea) fine detail and color vision daylight or well-lit conditions Rods peripheral retina detect black, white and gray twilight or low light

21 Retina’s Reaction to Light
Optic nerve- nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain Blind Spot- point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a “blind spot” because there are no receptor cells located there Fovea- central point in the retina, around which the eye’s cones cluster

22 Pathways from the Eyes to the Visual Cortex

23 Visual Information Processing
Feature Detectors neurons in the visual cortex respond to specific features shape angle movement Stimulus Cell’s responses

24 How the Brain Perceives

25 Illusory Contours

26 Visual Information Processing
Parallel Processing simultaneous processing of several dimensions through multiple pathways color motion form depth

27 Visual Information Processing
Scene Retinal processing: Receptor rods and conesbipolar cells  ganglion cells Feature detection: Brain’s detector cells respond to elementary features-bars, edges, or gradients of light Abstraction: Brain’s higher-level cells respond to combined information from feature-detector cells Recognition: Brain matches the constructed image with stored images

28 Visual Information Processing
Trichromatic (three color) Theory Young and Helmholtz three different retinal color receptors red green blue

29 Color-Deficient Vision
People who suffer red-green blindness have trouble perceiving the number within the design

30 Visual Information Processing
Opponent-Process Theory- opposing retinal processes enable color vision “ON” “OFF” red green green red blue yellow yellow blue black white white black

31 Opponent Process- Afterimage Effect

32 Audition Audition Frequency Pitch the sense of hearing
the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time Pitch a tone’s highness or lowness depends on frequency

33 The Intensity of Some Common Sounds

34

35 Audition- The Ear Outer Ear Middle Ear Inner Ear Auditory Canal
Eardrum Middle Ear hammer anvil stirrup Inner Ear oval window cochlea basilar membrane hair cells

36 Audition Place Theory Frequency Theory
the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea’s membrane is stimulated Frequency Theory the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch

37 Taste 4 basic sensations – sweet, sour, salty and bitter
All taste is a mixture of these Taste is a chemical sense Taste buds Sensory interaction

38

39 Smell nerve Olfactory bulb Receptor cells in Nasal olfactory membrane
passage Olfactory bulb nerve

40 Age, Sex and Sense of Smell
Women Men Age Group 4 3 2 Number of correct answers Women and young adults have best sense of smell

41 Touch Skin Sensations pressure warmth cold pain
only skin sensation with identifiable receptors warmth cold pain

42 Pain Gate-Control Theory
theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological “gate” that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain “gate” opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers “gate” closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain

43 Pain Control Drugs, surgery, acupuncture, electrical stimulation, massage, exercise, hypnosis, relaxation training, and thought distraction Lamaze Psychological aspects of pain

44 Body Position and Movement
Kinesthesis the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts Vestibular Sense the sense of body movement and position including the sense of balance

45 Vestibular sense - the sense of body movement and position, including the sense of balance
Semicircular canals – pretzel Vestibular sacs – connect the canals to the cochlea Move when we move our head Hairlike receptors

46 Sensory Restriction Kissing Aphasia – ability to comprehend language Loss of a sense 1st experiments – Sensory Deprivation – disoriented, hallucinations Sensory restriction does not disturb most people It reduces stress More open to positive influence Behavior modification REST – restricted environmental stimulation therapy Bottom-Up Chapter 6 Top-Down

47 If you had to lose one sense, which would it be?
If you could only have one, which would it be?

48 Perception Selective Attention focus of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus

49 Perceptual Illusions

50 Perceptual Organization- Gestalt
Visual Capture tendency for vision to dominate the other senses Grouping the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups

51 Perceptual Organization- Gestalt
Gestalt- an organized whole tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes Grouping Principles proximity- group nearby figures together similarity- group figures that are similar continuity- perceive continuous patterns closure- fill in gaps connectedness- spots, lines and areas are seen as unit when connected

52 Perceptual Organization
Figure and Ground organization of the visual field into objects (figures) that stand out from their surroundings (ground)

53 Perceptual Organization- Grouping Principles

54 Perceptual Organization- Grouping Principles
Gestalt grouping principles are at work here.

55 Perceptual Organization-Depth Perception
ability to see objects in three dimensions allows us to judge distance Binocular cues retinal disparity images from the two eyes differ closer the object, the larger the disparity convergence neuromuscular cue two eyes move inward for near objects

56 Perceptual Organization-Depth Perception
Visual Cliff

57 Perceptual Organization-Depth Perception
Monocular Cues relative size smaller image is more distant interposition closer object blocks distant object relative clarity hazy object seen as more distant texture coarse --> close fine --> distant

58 Perceptual Organization-Depth Perception
Relative Size

59 Perceptual Organization-Depth Perception

60 Perceptual Constancy Perceptual Constancy
perceiving objects as unchanging despite changes in retinal image color shape size

61 Perceptual Organization

62 Perceptual Organization-Muller-Lyer Illusion

63 Perceptual Organization- Size-Distance Relationship

64 Perceptual Organization-Brightness Contrast

65 Perceptual Interpretation
Perceptual Adaptation (vision) ability to adjust to an artificially displaced visual field prism glasses Perceptual Set a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another

66 Perceptual Set- Schemas
What you see in the center is influenced by perceptual set

67 Perceptual Set- Schemas
Flying Saucers or Clouds?

68 Perception without Sensation?
Extrasensory Perception controversial claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input telepathy clairvoyance precognition Parapsychology the study of paranormal phenomena ESP psychokinesis


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