Sensation and Perception The Five Senses Gestalt Perceptions Cues to the brain.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sensation and Perception: How the World Enters the Mind
Advertisements

The smallest difference between two stimuli that is
PERCEPTION Chapter 4.5. Gestalt Principles  Gestalt principles are based on the idea that the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.  These principles.
Sensation and Perception Unit 4. The Basics of Sensation -Sensation -Behavior often begins with sensory input -Process by which we receive, transform,
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception Definitions Sensory Systems Vision Hearing The Other Senses Perception.
VISUAL PERCEPTION Question 1 The eye is the sense organ for A Taste B Smell C Touch D Vision.
Sensation and Perception
Part 1. Part 1: Sensory Processing Vision Part 2: Other Sensory Systems.
Myers’ EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed)
Sensation and Perception
Sensation Interacting with our environment. What’s the difference? Sensation Interaction between the body-environment the reception of physical stimulation.
© 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Huffman: PSYCHOLOGY IN ACTION, 7E Sensation and Perception Sensation is the process of receiving, converting, and transmitting.
Energy Senses Vision The eye Transduction In the brain Theories of Color Vision Trichromatic theory Opponent-process theory.
Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception. Table of Contents Sensation and Perception: The Distinction Sensation : stimulation of sense organs Perception: selection,
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Vision Use the following ppt. to take notes on the structure of the eye. Before you tape the eye diagram into notes – take notes on wavelengths (Obj.7)
Sensation and Perception
Sensation & Perception
W EEK 6 S ENSATION & PERCEPTION Chapter 4. V ISION Wavelength (hue) Amplitude Purity Cornea Lens Iris Pupil Retina Transduction Optic disk Optic nerve.
Vision Hearing Other Senses Perception 1 Perception 2.
Sensation & Perception Q1 Sensation is ….. Requires coordination between receptors, neural pathways, sensory processing in the brain Perception is …… Psychophysics.
Ch. 3 - Sensation and Perception Sensation - The experience of sensory stimulation Perception - The process of creating meaningful patterns from raw sensory.
Unit 4: Sensation and Perception
Unit 4: Sensation and Perception. Unit Overview Sensing the World: Some Basic Principles Vision Hearing Other Senses Perceptual Organization Perceptual.
Chapter Five Sensation. The Basics  Sensation  The mechanical process by which we “take in” physical information from the outside world  Psychophysics.
Team 1 $1,000,000 $500,000 $250,000 Our sense organs are packed with specialized cells called _________ that convert environmental energies into signals.
Sensation and Perception Chapter 3. Sensation The process of detecting a physical stimulus, such as light, sound, heat, or pressure.
Basics of Color Vision Wavelength: determines color – longer=red/shorter= violet Amplitude: determines brightness Purity: determines saturation.
Chapter 6 Sensation and Perception
Chapter 6 Section 2: Vision. What we See Stimulus is light –Visible light comes from sun, stars, light bulbs, & is reflected off objects –Travels in the.
Perception Review Kimberley Clow
Vision: Question 1 Theprotects the eye a. Corneab. pupilc. irisd. lens.
Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception PSYCHOLOGY Schacter Gilbert Wegner Brian Kelley, M.A., LPC.
Domain 2 Part 3 Sensation/Perception. Sensation v. Perception Sensation: activation of our senses (eyes, ears, etc.) Perception: the process of understanding.
Copyright McGraw-Hill, Inc Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception.
Sensation and Perception
Essentials of Understanding Psychology
S ENSATION & PERCEPTION Chapter 4. V ISION Wavelength (rue) Amplitude Purity Cornea Lens Iris Pupil Retina -transduction Optic disk Optic nerve Rods Cones.
Sensation and Perception By Sarah Fredericks Period 1.
Vocab Theories & Laws Anatomical Structures Other Senses Perceptual Organization $100 $500 $400 $300 $200.
1 Sensation and Perception. 2 What is Sensation?? There are sense receptors for smell, temperature, vision, hearing, and taste When the sense receptors.
Table of Contents Chapter 4 Part 2 Sensation and Perception.
Perceptual organization How do we form meaningful perceptions from sensory information?
Sensation & Perception Chapter 5. Sensation & Perception The “five” senses: – sight, hearing taste, smell, touch, vestibular & kinesthetic Sensory organs.
Unit 4 Vocabulary Sensation and Perception. the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus.
Sensation and Perception Unit 4 Sensation and Perception Modules
Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception. Copyright © 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2 Detecting and Perceiving the World Sensation –the process of.
Sensation –Thresholds –Vision –Hearing –Other senses Perception –Selective attention –Illusions –Organization –Interpretation –ESP.
Unit 04 - Overview Basic Principles of Sensation and PerceptionBasic Principles of Sensation and Perception Influences on Perception Vision Visual Organization.
Copyright © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved CHAPTER 3 SENSATION AND PERCEPTION.
Sensation and Perception
VISUAL PERCEPTION PRINCIPLES
Section 2: The Visual System
Visual Perception Chapter 3.
Chapter 3: Sensation and Perception
Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning
The Five (?) Senses.
Thresholds Absolute Threshold- MINIMUM amount of sensory stimulation a person can normally detect Difference threshold-the amount of difference required.
Perceptual Constancies
Psychology: An Introduction
REPRESENTATION AND REALITY
Sensation and Perception
Sensation & perception
Terms Sensation Perception Absolute Threshold Difference Threshold
Sensation & Perception
Perceptual Organization
UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY
UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY
4. Visual Sensory Systems
Lecture 4. Human Factors : Psychological and Cognitive Issues (II)
Presentation transcript:

Sensation and Perception The Five Senses Gestalt Perceptions Cues to the brain

The Eye  Cornea  Lens  Retina  Rods  Cones  Fovea  Vitreous humor  Optic Nerve

Three Dimensions of Color Vision  Hue is the specific color perceived  Saturation refers to the purity of the color  Brightness refers to the intensity of the light energy that is perceived blueLower Saturation (more gray) More Brightness (more white)

 Pinna  Auditory Canal  Eardrum  Ossicles  Cochlea  Semi- circular canals The Ear

Characteristics of Sound  Frequency  Amplitude  Timbre  Place Theory  Frequency Theory

Sense of Smell  Olfactory epithelium  Olfactory bulbs  Pheromones

Sense of Taste

Other Senses Tactile Kinesthetic sense Vestibular sense Extra-Sensory Perception (ESP)?

Gestalt Principles of Perceptual Organization  Figure-Ground  Similarity  Proximity  Continuity  Closure

Figure-Ground

Perceptual Constancies Size Constancy Shape Constancy Brightness constancy

Depth Perception Binocular depth cues – visual depth cues that depend on both eyes working together. Monocular depth cues – visual depth cues perceived by one eye alone. Interposition Linear perspective Relative Size Texture gradient Atmospheric perspective Shadow or shading Motion parallax

Innate or Learned?  The visual cliff  Recovery from blindness  Culture and perception