SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sensation and Perception
Advertisements

Sensation- Day 2 Review Questions: 1.Define sensation and perception, and discriminate between the two. 2.What is the retina, and what happens there? 3.Describe.
Sensation & Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Chapter 41 Chapter 4 SENSATION AND PERCEPTION Section 1: Sensation and Perception: The BasicsSensation and Perception: The Basics Section 2: VisionVision.
Lesson Overview 31.4 The Senses.
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception
Sensation and Perception
W EEK 6 S ENSATION & PERCEPTION Chapter 4. V ISION Wavelength (hue) Amplitude Purity Cornea Lens Iris Pupil Retina Transduction Optic disk Optic nerve.
Ch 35 Sensors AP Lecture. Sensory Receptor Cells Sensors or receptors that convert sensory stimuli into change in membrane potential. This causes an action.
Vision Hearing Other Senses Perception 1 Perception 2.
Sensory Mechanisms.
Hearing: How do we hear?. Hearing: The Nature of Sound Module 9: Sensation.
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 1 Chapter 4 Question:In what ways do sensation and perception contribute to an understanding.
Listen to the audio lecture while viewing these slides or view the video presentations available through Blackboard Psychology 372 Physiological Psychology.
Domain 2 Part 3 Chapter 8 Sensation. Sensation v. Perception Sensation: activation of our senses (eyes, ears, etc.) Perception: the process of understanding.
Sensation and Perception. Sensation The process by which sensory systems (eyes, ears, and other sensory organs) and the nervous system receive stimuli.
Chapter Five Sensation. The Basics  Sensation  The mechanical process by which we “take in” physical information from the outside world  Psychophysics.
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION. Sensation—the process of detecting a physical stimulus Perception—the process of integrating, organizing and interpreting sensations.
The Senses. Sensory Receptors Sensory receptors = neurons that react directly to stimuli from the environment. – Light, sound, motion, chemicals, pressure.
The Visual System. The Awareness Test Just for fun, let’s test your awareness of your surroundings…
The Nervous System Section 35-4: The Senses.
Sensation- Day 2 Review Questions: 1.Define sensation and perception, and discriminate between the two. 2.What is the retina, and what happens there? 3.Describe.
Adv Biology 1-2. Sensory Receptors Sensory receptors detect stimuli. Mechanoreceptor-detects mechanical energy. Sound, pressure Photoreceptors-detects.
The Retina Retina is a delicate tissue composed of two layers Sensory layer contains photoreceptors (rods and cones) that sense light Sensory layer consists.
Option E: Neurobiology and Behavior. E.2.1 Outline the diversity of stimuli that can be detected by human sensory receptors, including mechanoreceptors,
S ENSATION & PERCEPTION Chapter 4. V ISION Wavelength (rue) Amplitude Purity Cornea Lens Iris Pupil Retina -transduction Optic disk Optic nerve Rods Cones.
Unit 5: Sensation & Perception Vision and Hearing.
The Senses Chapter 35.4.
Vocab Theories & Laws Anatomical Structures Other Senses Perceptual Organization $100 $500 $400 $300 $200.
Lesson Overview 31.4 The Senses.
Hearing The Nature of Sound. Sound Sound, like light, comes in waves Sound is vibration Features of sound include: – Pitch – Hertz – decibels.
The Auditory System, Olfaction, Gustation, and Somothesis.
PowerLecture: Chapter 35 Sensory Perception. Sensory Receptors Convert energy of a stimulus into action potentials MechanoreceptorsThermoreceptors Pain.
Sensation & Perception Chapter 5. Sensation & Perception The “five” senses: – sight, hearing taste, smell, touch, vestibular & kinesthetic Sensory organs.
Senses and Sensory Receptors. 5 major senses –Sight –Hearing –Taste –Smell –Touch Provide information from outside which stimulates the sensory nerves.
SENSATION. SENSATION DEFINED Sensation is the process by which sensory systems (eyes, ears, and other sensory organs) and the nervous system receive stimuli.
- SENSATION REFERS TO THE PROCESS OF SENSING OUR ENVIRONMENT THROUGH TOUCH, TASTE, SIGHT, SOUND, AND SMELL. THIS INFORMATION IS SENT TO OUR BRAINS IN RAW.
Sensation & Perception Sensation: stimulation of sensory receptors. Transmission of sensory information to brain. Perception: Process by which sensations.
Unit 04 - Overview Basic Principles of Sensation and PerceptionBasic Principles of Sensation and Perception Influences on Perception Vision Visual Organization.
The Visual System.
Auditory System: Sound
Process of Eyesight and Hearing
KEY CONCEPT The senses detect the internal and external environments.
The Eye Processing in Brain Color
Brain Spinal Cord Nerves Neurons
Ch. 21 Control and Coordination
THE AUDITORY SYSTEM: HEARING
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (5th Ed)
Chapter 5: Control and Coordination
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensory  Systems  .
Sensory Pathways Functions of sensory pathways: sensory reception, transduction, transmission, and integration For example, stimulation of a stretch receptor.
Psychology: An Introduction
The Eye Processing in Brain Color
Review Session 3: Sensation and Perception
THE HUMAN EAR.
II. Receiving and Interpreting Sound
Be able to label THE LOBES Process of sensation Energy stimulates sense organ Receptor cell sends signal along sensory nerves Signals enter the.
Chapter 15 section 3 Sight and Hearing
Create K-W-L Chart #28 Topic : Brain and Senses
How We Hear.
Sensation and Perception
Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception
Sensation & Perception
Sense Organs: Eyes & Ears
Vision and Hearing.
The Senses.
The Ear & Sense of Hearing Notes
Presentation transcript:

SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

Sensation—the process of detecting a physical stimulus Perception—the process of integrating, organizing and interpreting sensations Five Sensations: vision gustation audition touch olfaction Is there a sixth??

Anatomical substrate for vision, i. e Anatomical substrate for vision, i.e., the pathway from the stimulus in the environment to the occipital lobe, where we “see” Vision begins with a stimulus from the environment—the range of the electromagnetic field from radio waves to cosmic rays; only a small portion is visible to humans ns

The pathway begins with -light from the environment which then passes through the -cornea, pupil and lens -light is focused on the retina It is here that “transduction” occurs *TRANSDUCTION* is the point at which the stimulus from the environment (light) becomes a nerve impulse (electrochemical neurotransmission)

The photoreceptors in the lining of the retina are called rods and cones -axons of rods and cones form optic nerve -optic nerve crosses at the optic chiasm -nerves project to the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus to the -visual cortex in the occipital lobe WHERE WE SEE!

Hearing begins in the environment and ends in the auditory cortex in the temporal lobe PATHWAY The stimulus from the environment is sound, in the form of waves. The sound is “funnelled” by the outer ear—pinna, ear canal and eardrum.

Middle ear—three tiny bones, called ossicles– anvil, stirrup, hammer Inner ear—cochlea snail-shaped structure about the size of a pea lined with hair cells that bend, causing “transduction” *TRANSDUCTION* is when a stimulus from the environment (sound) becomes a neural impulse (electrochemical neurotransmission)

Transduction occurs at basilar membranes Axon neurons become the optic nerve Optic nerve projects to the medial geniculate nucleus of the thalamus Thalamus to auditory cortex in Temporal lobe, where we “hear”. If a tree falls in the forest, and there’s no one there to hear it, does it make a sound?

OTHER SENSATIONS Smell

Taste Touch Also—kinesthesia (body movement) and vestibular (balance)

PERCEPTION refers to the process of integrating, organizing and interpreting sensory information into meaningful representations

GESTALT LAWS OF FORM PERCEPTION Figure-ground

The Law of Similarity

Law of Closure

Law of Good Continuation

Law of Proximity

Law of Simplicity

Depth Perception

ILLUSIONS (MISPERCEPTIONS) Muller-Lyer

Moon Illusion

Shepherd Table’s Illusion