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Sensation and Perception

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Title: Sensation and Perception


1
Sensation and Perception
  • By Sarah Fredericks
  • Period 1

2
What are sensation and perception?
  • Sensation- relationship between physical
    stimulation and its psychological effects
  • Perception- how we recognize, interpret, and
    organize our sensations

3
Thresholds
  • Detection- the act of sensing a stimulus
  • Absolute threshold- the level of stimulation that
    is right on our perceptual borderline. We cannot
    detect lower levels of stimuli, but we can detect
    higher levels.
  • Just Noticeable Difference-the minimum amount of
    distance between two stimuli that can be detected
    as distinct
  • Measuring detection thresholds- signal detection
    theory- the signal (stimulus) is either present
    or it is not
  • Webers Law- the observation that JND is a
    proportion of stimulus intensity. The greater the
    magnitude of the stimulus the larger the
    differences must be to be noticed.

4
Receptor Process
  • Receptor cells- designed to detect specific types
    of energy
  • Receptive field- the area from which our receptor
    cells receive input
  • Transduction- takes place at the level of the
    receptor cells, and then the neural message is
    passed to the nervous system
  • Contralateral shift- level of the thalamus. Most
    of the sensory input from one side of the body
    travels to the opposite side of the brain
  • No matter what the form of input at the level of
    receptor, it must be converted, transduced

5
Sensory Mechanisms
  • Sensory coding- the process by which receptors
    convey such a range of information to the brain
  • Wavelengths of light and frequency of sound are
    hue and pitch
  • Amplitude brightness for light and loudness of
    sound
  • Single cell recording- technique by which the
    firing rate and pattern of a single receptor cell
    can be measured in response to varying sensory
    input
  • Visual sensation- occurs when the eye receives
    light input from the outside world
  • Distal stimulus- the object as it exits in the
    environment
  • Proximal stimulus- the image of that object on
    the retina. Is inverted so the brain can
    interpret the image

6
Ear
7
How the ear functions
  • Auditory input- in the form of sound waves enters
    the ear by passing the outer ear and into the ear
    canal
  • Outer ear collects and magnifies sound waves
  • Vibration enters the tympanic membrane, hit the
    ossicles, and vibrates them
  • Last of the three ossicles, stapes, vibrate
    against the oval window (beginning of the inner
    ear)
  • Further vibrate the cochlea, which contain
    receptor cells located structures, basilar
    membrane and organ of corti
  • Inner ear- responsible for balance and has
    vestibular sacs-receptors sensitive to tilting

8
Sensory Adaptation
  • Detect changes in stimuli intensity and quality
  • Adaptation- unconscious, temporary change in
    response to environmental stimuli
  • Habituation- process by which we become
    accustomed to a stimulus, and notice it less and
    less over time
  • Dishabituation- occurs when a change in the
    stimulus, even a small change, causes us to
    notice it again

9
Attention
  • Attention- processing through cognition of a
    select portion of the massive amount of
    information incoming from the senses and
    contained in memory
  • Selective attention- attend to one thing while
    ignoring another
  • Divided attention- trying to focus n more than
    one task at a time, is most difficult when
    attending to two or more stimuli that activate
    the same sense. Declines with age

10
Eye
11
How the eye functions
  • Light passes through the cornea (protective
    layer)
  • Under the cornea, Lens (bends in order to focus
    an image of the outside world on the retina).
    This focusing- accommodation
  • Retina at the back of the eye and is covered
    with receptor cells, rods and cones
  • Rods- sensitive in low light
  • Cones- bright light and color vision
  • Cones clustered in the fovea- greatest visual
    acuity
  • Information travels to the visual association
    areas for processing
  • Young Helmholtz theory- the cones in the retina
    are activated by light waves associated with
    blue, red, and green.
  • Opponent process theory- black/white,
    blue/yellow, red/green operates in theses color
    sets. If one color is activated the other isnt

12
Perception
  • Perceptual processes- how our mind interprets
    these stimuli
  • Bottom-up processing- achieves recognition of an
    object by breaking it down into its component
    parts
  • Top-down processing- relies on prior experience
    with an object
  • Theory of constructive perception- states that we
    create perceptual constructs out of their pieces
    or elements with the involvement of higher
    cognitive functions. If we are missing part of
    something we are still able to figure out the
    whole
  • Direct perception- takes the view that our
    sensations and sensory context are all we need
    for perception. Prior knowledge or learning is
    not necessary.
  • Depth perception- perceive depth, size, shape,
    and motion. Is facilitated by various perceptual
    cues
  • - Monocular depth cues- are those that we need
    only one eye to see
  • - Binocular depth cues- rely on both eyes viewing
    an image

13
Continued
  • Relative size- refers to the fact that images
    that are farther from us project a smaller image
    on the retina than do those that are closer to
    us.
  • Texture gradient- textures, or patterns of
    distribution of objects, appear to grow more
    dense as distance increases
  • Interposition- which occurs when a near object
    partially blocks the view of an object behind it
  • Linear perspective- a monocular cue based on the
    perception that parallel lines seem to draw a
    closer together as the lines recede in to the
    distance
  • Vanishing point- as your looking at two rails and
    they are moving away from you they draw closer
    together
  • Aerial perspective- another perceptual cue, which
    is based on the observation that atmospheric
    moisture and dust tend to obscure objects in the
    distance more than they do nearby objects. Things
    look more distant than they actually are

14
Finally
  • Gestalt approach- top-down theory. Most
    perceptual stimuli can be broken down into
    figure-ground relationships.
  • Proximity- the tendency to see objects near to
    each other as forming groups
  • Similarity- the tendency to prefer to group like
    objects together
  • Symmetry- the tendency to perceive preferentially
    forms that make up mirror images
  • Continuity- the tendency to perceive
    preferentially fluid or continuous forms, rather
    than jagged or irregular ones
  • Closure- the tendency preferentially to close up
    object that are not complete
  • Law of Pragnanz- minimum tendency, meaning that
    we tend to see objects in their simplest forms
  • Features- different orientations
  • Feature detectors- neurons that respond to
    specific features
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