Sensation and Perception

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sensation Overview How is perception different from sensation? What is psychophysics? What do sense organs do? How does vision work? How does this compare.
Advertisements

PSYCH JOURNAL 9/24/2013 Vision is the most frequently studied sense. Why do you think this is the case? Why is vision so important? How would your life.
 Objective: Students will explain the difference between sensation & perception, identify some of the key terms for sensation, and explain how the eye.
Sensation & Perception
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY Module 14 Introduction to Sensation and Perception: Vision James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers.
.  Sensation: process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energy  Perception: process of organizing and.
Jayme Shadowens.  Senses = filters  Process incoming information  Physical stimulation into neural impulses that give us sensations  Sensation: the.
Test your Awareness 1 (basketball game). Core Concepts in Understanding Sensation and Perception AP Unit 3 Reading pp
Serial Conscious Processing Slower than parallel processing Allows us to solve new problems which require focus Volunteers?
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION. Sensation: the stimulation of sense organs---absorption of energy (light/sound waves) Perception: selection, organization, and.
Vocab Theories & Laws Anatomical Structures Other Senses Perceptual Organization $100 $500 $400 $300 $200.
Sensation Intro. to Psychology PSY-101 Instructor: Miss Samia Khanum.
Sensation and Perception By: Mike Hervey. Thresholds Absolute Thresholds: the level of stimulation that is right on our perceptual borderline Absolute.
Sensation & Perception A.P. Psychology Chapter 4.
Sensation and Perception. Transformation of stimulus energy into a meaningful understanding –Each sense converts energy into awareness.
Sensation & Perception Chapter 5. Sensation & Perception The “five” senses: – sight, hearing taste, smell, touch, vestibular & kinesthetic Sensory organs.
Sensation and Perception. Introduction to Sensation The process by which our sensory receptors respond to light, sound, odor, textures, and taste and.
Basic Principles of Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception Unit 7
Sensation and Perception
Psychology Ch. 3 Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception Unit 7
Sensation & Perception
Senses and Perception Chapter 4.
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (5th Ed)
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception
Sensation and Perception
AP Psychology Sensation Essential Task 4-1:
Chapter 6 Sensation and Perception
Bell Work What occurs when experiences influence our interpretation of data? A. Selective attention B. Transduction C. Bottum-up processing D. Top-down.
SENSATION & PERCEPTION
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Chapter 6 (C): Vision.
Unit 5: Senation & Perception Day 1: Sensory Thresholds & The Eye
Sensation and Perception
Unit 5: Senation & Perception Day 2: The Eye
Chapter 8 Sensation & Perception
Introduction to Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation.
Sensation.
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION
Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION
Introductory Psychology Concepts
Introduction to Sensation and Perception
Sensation Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY Taken from: James A. McCubbin, PhD
Chapter 4(B): Thresholds and Sensory Adaptation
1. The point at which a stimulus can be detected
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION
Sensation & Perception
Sensation and Perception Liudexiang
Sensation and Perception
Intro to Sensation Module 12
AP Psychology Sept. 28th Objective Opener
Chapter Four Sensation
Chapter 6 (B): Thresholds and Sensory Adaptation
Experiencing the World
Consumer Perception (Ref. Chapter 8).
1. The point at which a stimulus can be detected
Good Morning! Write these questions down, we will answer them “Art Gallery” style in a moment What is happening in this picture? Who is going up? Who.
Sensation and Perception
(Do Now) Journal What is psychophysics? How does it connect sensation with perception? What is an absolute threshold? What are some implications of Signal.
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Presentation transcript:

Sensation and Perception Chapter Five Sensation and Perception

Perception What is sensation?

Sensation Process by which stimuli are detected, transduced into nerve impulses, and sent to the brain How one detects stimuli and nerve impulses How stimuli are sensed and sent to brain

Perception What is perception?

Perception The process of organizing stimulus input and giving it meaning Organization and meaning are given to stimuli Individual differences are seen

Sensation and Perception Information comes in through our senses our brains interpret this information You LOOK with your eyes, you SEE with your brain Sensation Stimulus-detection process Organs translate stimuli into nerve impulses - TRANSDUCTION Perception Organizing & interprets, giving meaning to input

Absolute Threshold • Intensity at which stimulus can be detected 50% of time • Lower the absolute threshold - Higher the sensitivity

Difference Thresholds How much of a change is required to notice a difference depends on the comparison being made. In darkness a dim light is visible, but that same light is not noticed in bright sunlight. A soft whisper is noticed in the quiet, but it may take a shout to be heard at a club.

Sensory Processes Weber’sLaw • JND is proportional to magnitude of stimulus for which comparison is being made • Proportion is called Weber Fraction • Amount of increase needed to make a difference • If you are carrying 2 kg, 1 additional gram will not make a difference • If you carry only 20 grams, 1 gram will make a difference Weber’s Law states that the JND is a constant proportion, unique to each sensory system.

Weber Fraction For weight is about 1/50 For 50 grams need only 1 gram For 500 grams need 10 grams Breaks down at very high & low intensities Holds for most frequently encountered range

Inattentional Blindness

1. Jennifer plays her music very loud while she studies 1. Jennifer plays her music very loud while she studies. Upset by how loud the music is, her mother insists Jennifer turn the music down. After 10 minutes, Jennifer's mom asks her daughter once again to please turn down the volume of the music. Jennifer insists she already turned it down although her mother swears it is as loud as it always was. The fact that Jennifer hears the music as softer and her mother experiences the volume as unchanged indicates that, clearly, Jennifer and her mother have . A. different absolute thresholds B. different signal detection C. difference thresholds D. different tolerance levels

2. A useful application of Weber fractions is that: A 2. A useful application of Weber fractions is that: A. by looking at them, we can tell what the absolute threshold is. B. they minimize the problems associated with false alarms. C. they minimize the problems associated with misses. D. they allow for sensitivity comparisons between the different sense modalities.

3. You have just arrived at the library to study and just as you are starting to read your assignment, a group of students at a nearby table begin a loud conversation. At first, these extra sounds annoy you, but you return to your reading and pretty soon, you are no longer aware of them, even though the students are continuing to talk. This example is most similar to what is known as: A. a difference threshold. B. an absolute threshold. C. a perceptual set. D. sensory adaptation.

4. The owl and other nocturnal creatures need exceptional vision due to the low levels of light at night when they are hunting for food. Because their ability to survive depends on this keen sense of sight, their retinas contain . A. more cones than rods B. more rods than cones C. cones but no rods D. rods but no cones

5. In the visual system, negative colour after images demonstrate the operation of: A. trichromatic processes. B. opponent processes. C. subtractive colour processes. D. red-green and black-white processes.