Sensation and Perception - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 98
About This Presentation
Title:

Sensation and Perception

Description:

Sensation and Perception Now that we have looked at what a stimuli is, we need to understand what a sensation is, and how our brain perceives it. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:318
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 99
Provided by: owne3519
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Sensation and Perception


1
Sensation and Perception
  • Now that we have looked at what a stimuli is, we
    need to understand what a sensation is, and how
    our brain perceives it.

2
Sensation vs. perception
  • Sensation is the stimulation of sense organs.
  • Perception is the selection, organization, and
    interpretation of sensory input
  • It is the organization of sensory input into
    something meaningful.

3
Psychophysics
  • Psychophysics the study of how physical stimuli
    are translated into psychological experience.

4
A new way of looking at threshold
  • Threshold can also be explained as the dividing
    point between energy levels that do and do not
    have a detectible effect.
  • Absolute threshold the minimum amount of
    stimulation that an organism can detect.

5
JNDs
  • JND Just Noticeable Difference the smallest
    difference in the amount of stimuli that an
    organism can detect. The size of the JND is
    constantly proportional to the initial stimuli.
    Webers Law
  • The perceived magnitude of the experience is
    proportional to the number of JNDs that the
    originating experience is above the absolute
    threshold.

6
Signal detection
  • Signal Detection Theory states that the detection
    of a stimuli involves decision making processes
    as well sensory processes.
  • These can be conscious or unconscious
  • This can be affected by a variety of factors. Eg.
    Noise.
  • This is all important for perception without
    awareness. Subliminal advertising.

7
Sensory Adaptation
  • Sensory adaptation the gradual decline in
    sensitivity to a prolonged stimulus.
  • Possibly an evolutionary development we need to
    know about the changes rather than the constants
    in our environment.

8
Subliminal advertising
9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
One to One Fallacy
  • Sensory adaptation, Webers Law, Signal-Detection
    Theory, and JNDs all show that there is no one
    to one correspondence between sensory input and
    sensory experience.

20
The 5 Senses The Eye
  • The most sophisticated sensory organ that an
    organism can possess is the eye
  • It can see over vast distances in almost real
    time.
  • It can detect minute changes and motion and can
    self-adjust quickly to varying levels of JNDs.

21
The stimulus Light
  • Light is a form of electromagnetic radiation that
    has three varying properties
  • Wavelength
  • Amplitude
  • Purity
  • These properties are all sensed in different ways
    by the eye
  • Hue
  • Brightness
  • Saturation

22
(No Transcript)
23
Light interacts with the eye
  • Light enters the eye through the cornea and is
    modified by the lens.
  • The lens focuses light on the receptor surface at
    the back of the eye called the retina.
  • The pupil is the opening in the iris, or the
    colored muscle surrounding it. It closes and
    opens to regulate the amount of light entering
    the eye.

24
Rods and cones
  • Light passes through the cornea, pupil, and lens
    to fall on the retina the light sensitive layer
    of receptors that line the back of the eye
    cavity.
  • Light is detected by two different kinds of cells
    rods and cones
  • Rods more sensitive to light and dark and
    peripheral vision
  • Cones more sensitive to daylight vision and
    color. Cones are concentrated in the center of
    the retina - fovea

25
Eye as a processing organ
  • The layer of intervening cells between the light
    source and the rods and cones actually processes
    the image as inverted before sending the
    information through the optic disk to the brain.

26
Color vision
  • Color is a psychological interpretation, not a
    property of light itself.
  • Humans can distinguish roughly 1 million
    different colors created by subtractive or
    additive mixing.
  • Green exhibits the most variation in perception

27
Color vision
  • Light perception is a mix of two different
    theories
  • Trichromatic theory there are three different
    types of cones each excited to a different
    wavelength. red, green, blue.
  • Opponent-Process theory receptors in the eye
    have antagonistic responses to three PAIRS of
    colors. red/green, blue/yellow, black/white.

28
Opponent-process Theory
  • When the three types of cones are stimulated, it
    has an inhibitory effect on the opposite color on
    the spectrum. This is what produces an afterimage
    a visual image that persists after the stimuli
    is removed.

29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
Color processing in the retina
  • Cells in the retina respond in opposite ways to
    the same wavelength.
  • Eg. The same cell will be excited by green and
    inhibited by red, and there are other cells that
    are excited by red and inhibited by green.

34
Perception
  • As the eye sends signals to the brain, these are
    processed with implicit assumptions about the
    reality presented that go BEYOND what is only seen

35
  • Impossible figures objects that can be
    represented in two dimensional pictures but
    cannot exist in three dimensional space.

36
  • Perceptual constancy the tendency to experience
    a stable perception in the face of continually
    changing sensory input.
  • Size, shape, and brightness

37
Depth perception
  • Involves interpretation of cues that indicate how
    near or far away objects are.
  • There are two different sets of cues that can
    help us judge distance.
  • Monocular cues
  • Binocular cues

38
Binocular cues
  • Clues about distance based on the differing view
    from the two eyes.
  • Retinal disparity objects within 25 ft. of the
    viewer project images to slightly different
    locations on the right and left retina. The brain
    will interpret these two differing images as
    depth.
  • Convergence sensing the eyes converging toward
    each other as they focus on closer objects.

39
Monocular cues
  • Cues about distance based on the image in each
    eye alone.

40
  • Motion parallax images of objects at different
    distances move across the retina at different
    rates.

41
Monocular cues - Pictorial depth
  • Cues about distance that can be given in a flat
    picture frame.

42
  • Linear perspective parallel lines converge as
    they move away from the viewer

43
  • Texture gradients details become clearer as
    objects near, become smoother as objects are far
    away.

44
  • Interposition an object that comes between the
    viewer and another object, it must be closer.

45
  • Relative size closer objects appear larger. 

46
  • Height in plane distant objects appear higher
    in picture.

47
Perception of form and shape
  • The same visual input can produce radically
    different perceptions.
  • Perceptual set a readiness to perceive a
    stimuli in a particular way.
  • This readiness causes us to assemble specific
    elements in an image into a more complex form
    feature analysis.

48
Feature Analysis
  • When we are faced with a stimuli, our brain keys
    on certain feature detectors to analyze its
    content and make a decision about what that
    object is and means.

49
Gestalt Analysis
  • Gestalt Analysis the presentation of the entire
    set of stimuli as a whole leads to the
    organization of its individual parts. 
  • There are several principles of Gestalt
    psychology and perception

50
  • Figure and ground What part of the image is
    grouped into the foreground or the background
    will determine how an image is perceived.

51
  • Proximity Things that are nearer to each other
    are perceived to be grouped.

52
  • Similarity People tend to group stimuli that are
    similar.

53
  • Continuity People tend to follow whatever
    direction their eye is led. People connect points
    that form a line or a smooth curve.

54
  • Simplicity People tend to organize complex
    visual images in the simplest way possible.

55
  • Closure People tend to group elements in a way
    that creates a sense of closure or completeness.

56
Which principle applies?
57
(No Transcript)
58
(No Transcript)
59
(No Transcript)
60
Your homework
  • 1) find an image on the internet
  • 2) print it
  • 3) explain the Gestalt perceptive elements at
    work in it
  • 4)write those explanations down
  • 5) staple the picture to the explanation, put
    your name on it and hand it in FOR TOMORROW
  • 6) it will be marked out of 5 based on your
    accuracy and explanation

61
Experiment
  • What makes a symbol into a letter?
  • Define a particular letter.

62
Kinesthesis and Vestibular Senses
  • The sensation that allows an organism to orient
    itself in space and informs about its own
    movement.

63
Skeletal movement and orientation
  • Skeletal movement is sensed through kinesthesis,
    the feedback we get from the muscles, tendons,
    and joints as they move.
  • Orientation is sensed through receptors in the
    inner ear of each side of the head called the
    semicircular canals.
  • Three canals contain a fluid that rotates as the
    head moves, this motion causes tiny hairs in the
    vestibules to move.
  • This provides information about the extent of the
    heads rotation.

64
Vision stabilization
  • This sense plays a vital role in stabilizing
    vision.
  • As the head and body move through space, the
    vestibular senses from each side of the head
    relay their information directly to the muscles
    that control each eye.
  • The motion of the head is cancelled by an equal
    and opposite motion of the eye.

65
False Motion
  • The reverse effect can take place as motion of
    the eyes can affect the perceived motion of the
    vestibular senses.

66
The Skin
  • Researchers believe that there are four distinct
    skin sensations pressure, warmth, cold, and
    pain.
  • In this case, there are different receptors for
    each kind of sense quality.

67
Multiple specialized receptors
  • Variations in pressure sensations are produced by
    different receptors in the skin.
  • Some are wrapped around the base of hair
    follicles and sense movements of the hair
  • Others are capsules that are easily bent by
    slight deformations of the skin.
  • Other capsules respond to vibrations, steady
    indentation of the skin, and others to sudden
    movement across the skin.

68
Mystery of pain
  • Less is known about the sensation of temperature
    and pain.
  • Some of these experiences are triggered by free
    nerve endings with no specialized structures
    attached to them.
  • There is little known about the nature of pain.
    Research has shown that it results from an
    intense triggering of a given receptor.

69
Taste
  • Taste is vital to the organism for providing
    information about substances that may or may not
    be ingested.

70
  • In humans, taste receptors sense chemicals
    dissolved in water on the tongue. These receptors
    are grouped into taste buds on the tongue and
    elsewhere in the mouth.
  • Taste sensations can be divided into four basic
    qualities bitter, sour, sweet, and salty.
  • All other tastes are a combination of these four.

71
Specific receptors
  • Nerve fibers are specifically targeted to respond
    to similar chemical compounds. Some fibers
    respond best to salts, others to sugars, etc.
  • Relatively few substances stimulate one type of
    nerve only so most taste sensations are a pattern
    of varying levels of each taste specific fiber.

72
Smell
  • Smell is one of the three distant senses
    (hearing, sight)

73
Olfaction
  • Smell (olfaction) occurs when chemicals in the
    environment excite receptors located at the top
    of the nasal cavity olfactory epitheluim

74
The nature of smell
  • Several sensory categories exist for smell
    fragrant, spicy, and putrid.
  • However, it remains unknown how chemicals can
    trigger these specific sensations.
  • It is believed that it is a pattern sensation
    rather than sense-specific nerves that is
    responsible.

75
Smell Taste
  • Smell occurs within the mouth as well flavor
  • Flavor depends largely on smell rather than
    taste.
  • When our sense of smell is temporarily impaired,
    our sense of taste goes with it.

76
Smell as a distant sense
  • Studies have shown that smell has an important
    effect on behaviour.
  • It can be used to warn an organism of danger
  • It can be used to sell things to consumers
  • It can be used to identify people.

77
Pheromones
  • Pheromones are chemical substances released by
    organisms that communicate information and
    influence behaviour of other members of the same
    species.
  • Females will secrete a substance that signals
    their sexual receptiveness
  • Rats who have been shocked in a cage will secrete
    a substance that will cause the next rat placed
    in the same cage to respond with anxiety.
  • Studies have also shown that menstrual synchrony
    is triggered by pheromones of females living
    together.
  • Also, female sensitivity to pheomones fluctuates
    over the duration of the menstrual cycle and will
    peak during ovulation.

78
Hearing
  • Hearing is produced by variations in the air
    pressure around the head.
  • These variations have two properties that are
    sensed by the ear.
  • 1)Wavelength the distance between two incoming
    waves.
  • 2) Amplitude the height of the incoming waves.
  • These two properties can be sensed by the brain
    as loudness and pitch.

79
Complex waves
  • Most waves encountered in the evironment are a
    combination of several other waves.
  • The brain is able to separate the various sound
    patterns into their component parts

80
Sound
  • Sound waves are collected by the outer ear and
    funneled to a membrane called the ear drum.
  • Waves are then transferred across a second
    chamber where they trigger movement in a series
    of small bones called the ossicles.

81
  • Vibrations of this membrane cause changes in the
    fluid contained in the cochlea, a snail shaped
    chamber lined with tiny hairs.
  • These fluid changes trigger movement in the hairs
    that are sensed by receptors and passed along the
    auditory nerve to the brain.

82
Sensory interaction
  • This pattern of stimulation illustrates a
    principle of sensation in which the response by a
    sensory system to a stimulus rarely depends on
    that stimulus alone, but is also affected by
    other stimuli that are occurring or may have just
    occurred recently Sensory interaction.

83
Sensory Coding
  • With all the different senses that we have looked
    at, the final problem becomes
  • how does the body encode neural impulses into
    complex sensations?
  • There must be some property of the neural
    impulses that differentiate one sensation from
    another across all the different sense receptors.

84
Stimulus intensity
  • There is one code for intensity. We have seen
    that this can be communicated in two ways
  • The number of neurons firing.
  • The rate of each neuron firing.

85
Stimulus quality
  • There is another code for quality.
  • There are two theories that try to explain this
  • Specificity theory different sense qualities
    are triggered by different nerves being
    stimulated, each one specific for a different
    quality.
  • Across-fiber pattern theory different sense
    qualities are triggered by a pattern of
    activation across numerous nerves. Different
    sensations are actually different patterns of
    nerves firing in specific ways.

86
Perceptual Cues
  • One primary example of perceptual cues at work is
    depth perception - involves interpretation of
    cues that indicate how near or far away objects
    are.

87
There are two different sets of cues that can
help us judge distance.
  • Binocular cues clues about distance based on
    the differing view from the two eyes.
  • Retinal disparity objects within 25 ft. of the
    viewer project images to slightly different
    locations on the right and left retina. The brain
    will interpret these two differing images as
    depth
  • Convergence sensing the eyes converging toward
    each other as they focus on closer objects.

88
(No Transcript)
89
(No Transcript)
90
  • Monocular cues cues about distance based on the
    image in each eye alone
  • Motion parallax images of objects at different
    distances move across the retina at different
    rates.
  • Pictorial depth cues cues about distance that
    can be given in a flat picture frame.
  • Linear perspective parallel lines converge as
    they move away from the viewer

91
  • Texture gradients details become clearer as
    objects near, become smoother as objects are far
    away.
  • Interposition an object that comes between the
    viewer and another object, it must be closer.
  • Relative size closer objects appear larger.
  • Height in plane distant objects appear higher
    in picture.

92
Misleading cues
  • Impossible figures objects that can be
    represented in two dimensional pictures but
    cannot exist in three dimensional space.

93
  • Perceptual constancy the tendency to experience
    a stable perception in the face of continually
    changing sensory input.

94
Describe the difference between pre-Renaissance
painters and post-Renaissance painters. How did
understanding of perception cues change?
  • Pre-Renaissance painters did not have a grasp of
    pictorial depth cues. Their renderings are
    awkward and flat. Renaissance painters mastered
    these cues, especially linear perspective, height
    in plane, and interposition. Instead of just
    relating the story of an event, they sought to
    re-create the reality or the illusion of the
    event happening.

95
How did the Impressionists use principles of
perception to go beyond reality?
  • Impressionists used separate spots of pure colors
    that would blur together at a distance. He used
    complementary colors to create the impression of
    a scene after it has been experienced rather than
    recreating the scene exactly at it was.

96
Using what we have already learned about sight
sensation, describe how Pointillism operates.
  • Seurat used small points of pure colors in an
    additive way. From a distance, these colours
    would be combines by the brain into stimuli of a
    single color. This shows an awareness of texture
    gradient. Also, continuity and closure Gestalt
    principles operate to create objects out of
    groupings of dots.

97
What perceptual principles are operating in
Picassos work? How does this affect the way you
like it?
  • Cubists applied the principles of feature
    analysis to their paintings, They reduced objects
    to their geometric component shapes and
    reassembled them on a flat plane. This triggers
    responses in the viewer using closure,
    continuity, similarity, and proximity. It is
    seen by the eye but understood by the mind
    freaky!

98
How many different images can you find in
Salvatore Dalis The Hallucinogenic Toreador?
Describe the effect this has on you as the viewer.
  • Bullfighter in the Venus de Milos,
  • a bull in the shapes below to the left,
  • a man waving a cape in the air.
  • This gives the painting a dream like quality.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com