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Sensation and Perception

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1 Sensation and Perception

2 True or False? Advertisers are able to shape our buying habits through subliminal messages. If we stare at a green square for a while and then look at a white sheet of paper, we see red. Touching adjacent cold and pressure spots triggers a sense of wetness. People who are born without the ability to feel pain may die by early adulthood. Without their smells, a cold cup of coffee may be hard to distinguish from a glass of red wine. Infants just learning to crawl do not perceive depth Persons who have sight in only one eye are totally unable to gauge distances. A person who is born blind but gains sight as an adult cannot recognize common shapes and forms. If required to look through a pair of glasses that turns the world upside down, we soon adapt and coordinate our movements without difficulty. Laboratory evidence indicates that some people do have ESP.

3 Sensation and Perception
Transformation of stimulus energy into a meaningful understanding Each sense converts energy into awareness

4 Sensation Detection and encoding of physical stimuli into neural signals Occurs at sensory receptors External stimuli correspond to sensory modalities Light waves: ___________ Sound waves : ___________ Pressure, warmth, cold, pain : ___________ Chemical messengers : _________&__________ Body position and movement : _________&_________

5 Perception Organization of sensory information into cognitive awareness environmental stimuli Occurs in the cerebral cortex

6 Processing stimuli Bottom-up processing Top-down processing
Scientific explanation Begins with receptors and works up to integration Top-down processing Understanding stimuli based on prior experience and expectations The brain will rapidly interpret stimuli based on their “most likely” explanation

7 Thresholds of sensation
Absolute threshold Minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time Ex. Whisper Difference threshold Minimum difference between two stimuli that can be detected 50% of the time Ex. Change in room temperature

8 Subliminal sensations
Sensations not strong enough to be perceived May be processed sometimes May result in understanding without conscious awareness Useful persuasion method?

9 Sensory adaptation Diminished sensitivity to a continuous stimulus
Allows for focus on relevant stimuli

10 Vision Stimulus: visible light Wavelength Intensity

11 Vision Receptive organ: the eye

12 Photoreceptors Rods Cones

13 Visual pathway Optic nerve Optic chiasm Thalamus Primary visual cortex
Exits retina Optic chiasm Thalamus Primary visual cortex

14 Processing visual stimuli
Feature detectors in the primary visual cortex respond to specific features in parallel Form Movement Depth Color

15 Perception of visual stimuli
Perception occurs in visual association areas in the occipital, parietal and temporal lobes

16 Color vision Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory
Red, green, blue color receptors in the retina Stimulation of one or many results in color sensation Opponent-process theory Colors are analyzed in terms of opponent colors Red vs. Green Yellow vs. Blue Black vs. White One color turns some cells “on” and other cells “off”

17 Psychology of visual perception
Top-down processing means that what we see is influenced by biological, psychological and socio-cultural factors

18 Perceptual organization
How do we form meaningful perceptions from sensory information?

19 Gestalt psychology Branch of cognitive psychology
Organization of many sensations into perceptions of wholes Based on experience and expectations Perceived whole is not always the same as its parts!

20 Form perception Simplification into easily interpretable wholes
Figure-ground

21 Form perception Grouping principles Proximity Similarity Continuity
Connectedness Closure

22 Depth perception Distance is perceived with vision and hearing
Visual depth perception Binocular cues Monocular cues

23 Binocular depth cues Retinal disparity Strongest visual depth cue

24 Monocular depth cues Light and shadow Relative size and position
Relative height/vertical position Linear perspective

25 Auditory location cues
Intensity and pitch Arrival times at each ear Clarity

26 Perceptual constancy Cognitive functions that maintain the features of an object, despite changing illumination, color, size, or shape Based on comparisons between the figure and ground

27 Color and lightness constancy
Consistent color and light intensity, despite changes in illumination

28 Shape and size constancy
Familiar objects are perceived as unchanging despite changes in retinal images.

29 Perceptual interpretation
Making sense of the perceptions produced by the cortex Genetics Experience Critical periods Plasticity and adaptation

30 Perceptual set Psychological predisposition to perceive stimuli in a particular way Shaped by learned assumptions and beliefs Affects how we interpret sensory stimuli Examples

31 Other sensory modalities

32 Hearing Stimulus - sound waves Frequency Amplitude

33 The ear

34 Auditory stimuli Bending of hair cells in the cochlea transduces vibrations into neural signals Auditory nerve Primary auditory cortex Auditory association cortex

35 Touch Stimulus - pressure, pain, warmth, cold
Receptors Other sensations Stimuli organized in primary somatosensory cortex Perceptions created in somatosensory association cortex

36 Pain Critical alert system Subjective Physiology Prior experiences
Attention Context Culture

37 Pain Gate-control theory Pain control/management

38 Taste Stimulus - chemical molecules that impart the sensations of sweet, sour, salty, bitter and umami Tastebuds contain taste and touch receptors

39 Taste perception Flavor Begins in brainstem
Based on taste, olfactory, and touch stimuli Begins in brainstem Completed in the limbic system

40 Taste preferences Genetic predisposition Biological predisposition
Learned responses

41 Smell Stimulus - chemical molecules Receptors in olfactory epithelium
Axons project directly to the olfactory bulb of the brain Perception begins in the olfactory bulb, completed in the limbic system

42 Kinesthesis & vestibular sense
Kinesthesis - sense of body position and movement Vestibular sense - sense of head postion and movement Stimulus - gravity and movement Receptors found in muscles (body) and inner ear (head)

43 Kinesthesis & vestibular sense
Sensory signals about position and movement are organized in the medulla and cerebellum Perception occurs throughout the brain Brain stem Temporal cortex


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