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General Psychology Chapter 3: Sensation and Perception

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Title: General Psychology Chapter 3: Sensation and Perception


1
General PsychologyChapter 3 Sensation and
Perception
2
  • Sensation
  • senses pick up sensory stimuli and send it to the
    brain
  • Perception
  • brain organizes and interprets sensory information

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Sensation
  • Absolute Threshold
  • minimum amount of sensory stimulation that can be
    detected 50 of the time
  • Difference Threshold
  • smallest increase or decrease in a stimulus
    required to produce the JND
  • Just Noticeable Difference (JND)
  • the smallest change in sensation a person is able
    to detect 50 of the time

5
1 cm
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  • Sensory Adaptation
  • adapt to unchanging stimulus so less sensitive to
    it
  • allows you to shift your attention to what is
    most important at any given time

7
Vision
  • Lens
  • behind iris changes shape as it focuses images
    on the retina (accommodation)
  • Retina
  • contains the rods and cones at the back of the
    eye
  • rods allow see black, white and gray in dim light
  • cones allow see color and details in adequate
    light

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Theories of Vision
  • Trichromatic theory
  • 3 types of cones which are most sensitive to red,
    green or blue which combine to produce all colors
  • research supports the retina has 3 types of cones
  • Opponent-process theory
  • 3 classes of cells increase their firing rate to
    signal one color and decrease their firing rate
    to signal the opposing color (red/green,
    yellow/blue, white/black)
  • supported by afterimage

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Theories of Hearing/Audition
  • Place Theory
  • sounds of different frequency or pitch cause
    activation at certain locations along the
    receptor cells of the cochlea
  • Frequency Theory
  • receptor cells vibrate the same number of times
    as the sounds that reach them

12
Smell and Taste
  • Olfactionthe sensation of smell
  • Pheromoneschemicals excreted by humans and
    animals that act as signals to, and elicit
    certain patterns of, behavior from members of the
    same species
  • animals mark off territories from same sex and
    signal sexual receptivity in opposite sex
  • humans unconsciously respond to pheromones for
    mating and to their relations

13
  • Gustationsensation of taste
  • 5 basic tastes
  • sweet
  • sour
  • salty
  • bitter
  • umami (triggered by glutamate)

14
  • 3 groups of taste sensitivity
  • Nontasters are unable to taste some sweet and
    bitter compounds, but do taste most other
    substances
  • Medium tasters have an average sense of taste to
    sweet and bitter compounds
  • Supertasters taste certain sweet and bitter
    compounds with far stronger intensity than other
    people

15
Skin Senses
  • Tactilepertaining to the sense of touch
  • Painmotivates us to tend to injuries, restrict
    activity, and seek medical help and to avoid
    pain-producing circumstances

16
Spatial Orientation Senses
  • Kinesthetic sense
  • gives information about movement of body and its
    parts
  • Vestibular sense
  • provides information about the bodys orientation
    in space

17
Perception
  • Gestalt principles of perceptual organization
  • Figure-groundas you view your world, some
    objects seem to stand out from the background
  • Similarityobjects that have similar
    characteristics are perceived as a unit
  • Proximityobjects that are close together in
    space or time are usually perceived as
  • belonging together
  • Continuitytend to perceive figures or objects as
    belonging together if they appear to form a
    continuous pattern
  • Closureperceive figures with gaps as complete

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  • Depth perception
  • The ability to see in three dimensions and to
    estimate distance

22
  • Binocular depth cues
  • Depth cues that depend on two eyes working
    together
  • Convergence
  • Occurs when the eyes turn inward to focus on
    nearby objects the closer the object, the
    greater the convergence
  • Binocular disparity (or retinal disparity)
  • Difference between the two retinal images formed
    by the eyes slightly different views of the
    objects focused on

23
  • Monocular depth cues
  • Interposition
  • Linear perspective
  • Relative size
  • Texture gradient
  • Atmospheric perspective
  • Motion parallax

24
  • Apparent motionpsychological construct movement
  • Phi Phenomenon
  • UFOseyes move but see as object moving

25
  • Ambiguous Figures
  • Can be seen in different ways to make different
    images

26
What do you see?
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  • Impossible figures
  • Do not seem unusual at first
  • Figures that cannot be built

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  • Illusion
  • A false perception of actual stimuli involving a
    misperception of size, shape, or the relationship
    of one element to another

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Influences on Perception
  • Bottom-up processing
  • Information processing in which individual
    components or bits of data are combined until a
    complete perception is formed
  • Top-down processing
  • Application of previous experience and conceptual
    knowledge to recognize the whole of a perception
    and thus easily identify the simpler elements of
    that whole

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  • Bottom up
  • 1 3 5 7 9 ? 13 ? ?

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40
  • Can you raed tihs? I Cdnuolt blveiee taht I
    cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg.
    The phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan
    mnid--aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde
    Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the
    ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng
    is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit
    pclae.
  • The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll
    raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the
    huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef,
    but the wrod as a wlohe. Amzanig huh? yaeh and I
    awlyas tghuhot slpeling was ipmorantt!

41
  • Perceptual set
  • An expectation of what will be perceived, which
    can affect what actually is perceived
  • Psychologists in a mental hospital as
    schizophrenics

42
  • Inattentional blindness
  • The phenomenon in which we miss an object in our
    field of vision because we are attending to
    another
  • Gorilla video tape
  • Studies showed that drivers often failed to
    perceive vehicles braking directly in front of
    them while engaged in hands-free cell phone
    conversations
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