Sensation & Perception Q1 Sensation is ….. Requires coordination between receptors, neural pathways, sensory processing in the brain Perception is …… Psychophysics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sensation and Perception Unit 4. The Basics of Sensation -Sensation -Behavior often begins with sensory input -Process by which we receive, transform,
Advertisements

Sensation & Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Sensation and Perception
Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception
Myers’ EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed)
Chapter 5 Sensation.
Energy Senses Vision The eye Transduction In the brain Theories of Color Vision Trichromatic theory Opponent-process theory.
Sensation and Perception Part 1: Intro and Vision.
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Vision Use the following ppt. to take notes on the structure of the eye. Before you tape the eye diagram into notes – take notes on wavelengths (Obj.7)
Unit 4: Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception. Sensation: What is it? The process by which a stimulus in the environment produces a neural impulse that the brain interprets.
Sensation The passive process of bringing information from the outside world into the body and to the brain.
W EEK 6 S ENSATION & PERCEPTION Chapter 4. V ISION Wavelength (hue) Amplitude Purity Cornea Lens Iris Pupil Retina Transduction Optic disk Optic nerve.
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception.
 Objective: Students will explain the difference between sensation & perception, identify some of the key terms for sensation, and explain how the eye.
Sensation & Perception
Vision Hearing Other Senses Perception 1 Perception 2.
Unit 4: Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Chapter Five Sensation. The Basics  Sensation  The mechanical process by which we “take in” physical information from the outside world  Psychophysics.
Team 1 $1,000,000 $500,000 $250,000 Our sense organs are packed with specialized cells called _________ that convert environmental energies into signals.
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.
Chapter 6 Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation Vision The Eye Theories Hearing The Ear Theories Other Senses Smell Taste Pain Gestalt Principles Perceptual Constancies Perception Basic Principles.
Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception McGraw-Hill ©2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Vision: Question 1 Theprotects the eye a. Corneab. pupilc. irisd. lens.
SENSATION 6-8% The process by which our sensory systems receive stimuli from our environment.
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception PSYCHOLOGY Schacter Gilbert Wegner Brian Kelley, M.A., LPC.
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.
Vocab Theories & Laws Anatomical Structures Other Senses Perceptual Organization $100 $500 $400 $300 $200.
Unit 3: Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Step Up To: Psychology by John J. Schulte, Psy.D. From Myers, Psychology 8e Worth Publishers.
Sensation and Perception Chelsea Touchtone Marissa McKenna Riley Johnson.
Sensation Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Chapter 5 Sensation. The process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment. sensation.
JHS AP Psychology Unit 4: Sensation, Perception Essential Task 4-2 :Describe the sensory process of vision including the specific nature of energy transduction.
Sensation and Perception The Five Senses Gestalt Perceptions Cues to the brain.
Sensation and Perception. Transformation of stimulus energy into a meaningful understanding –Each sense converts energy into awareness.
Perceptual organization How do we form meaningful perceptions from sensory information?
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Sensation & Perception Chapter 5. Sensation & Perception The “five” senses: – sight, hearing taste, smell, touch, vestibular & kinesthetic Sensory organs.
Unit 4 Vocabulary Sensation and Perception. the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus.
Sensation and Perception Sensation: your window to the world Perception: interpreting what comes in your window.
Definition Slides. Sensation = ? Sensation = the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from.
Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception. Copyright © 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2 Detecting and Perceiving the World Sensation –the process of.
Sensation –Thresholds –Vision –Hearing –Other senses Perception –Selective attention –Illusions –Organization –Interpretation –ESP.
Unit 04 - Overview Basic Principles of Sensation and PerceptionBasic Principles of Sensation and Perception Influences on Perception Vision Visual Organization.
Vision.
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (5th Ed)
Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception
Perceptual Constancies
The Eye Processing in Brain Color
Chapter 5 – Sensation Chapter 6 - Perception
Grudge Modules 12 – 15.
Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception
Sensation: your window to the world
Sensation & Perception
Experiencing the World
Sensation and Perception
Presentation transcript:

Sensation & Perception Q1 Sensation is ….. Requires coordination between receptors, neural pathways, sensory processing in the brain Perception is …… Psychophysics is

Q2 - Processing Top-down… Bottom-up … Parallel/ serial ….

Thresholds Q3 Absolute threshold - the intensity level at which a stimulus can be. …. Subliminal stimulation … Priming …..

Signal detection theory – Q4 Predicts …. Thresholds will … Tries to show why people respond …

Q4 Difference threshold - the minimum change … This may vary depending on health, stress, etc Weber’s Law Why can’t you buy 63 watt light bulbs?

Adaptation, habituation Q6 Sensory adaptation - decline in receptor activity … (it’s also true that your brain filters out sensory info you don’t need - reticular formation) Habituation - weakening of a …..

Parts of the eye – Q7 Cornea Iris Pupil Lens Retina Rods million - edge - fewer bipolars Cones - 6 million at fovea - indiv bipolars Bipolar cells Ganglion cells Optic nerve --- blind spot

Transduction Q8 Transduction is ….. The electromagnetic spectrum … Q9 - Frequency / amplitude – intensity/hue

Q10 - Near and Far Near-sightedness Far-sightedness

From the optic nerve to the brain Optic nerve Crossover - Sensory switch….. Visual ….

Visual fields

Optical chiasm - Q11

Color and detail - feature detection Only the cones respond to color Low ratio of cones to bipolar increases detail Q12 -Feature detection - individual neurons in visual cortex respond … Other neurons integrate features - face recognition

Low light Cones do not work in low light - no color vision Rods have higher ratio of rods to bipolar cells - aids in concentrating response to low light

Color vision Q13 - Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory RGB …. Q14 - Color-blindness …

Q15 Additive color mixing … Subtractive color mixing …

Opponent process theory – Q15 See afterimage graphic Neuron pairs …… Some neurons turn on ….. When you stare at a green image for a while …

Color constancy – Q16 Why can you distinguish colors when wearing sunglasses?

A little physics - Q17 Sound is waves of air striking our ears Height of waves = amplitude = Length of waves = frequency = Complexity = Decibel scale measures loudness Log scale: 20 = 10 x = 10 x20 30 = 100 x 10 WHY?

Parts of the ear Q18 See the diagram

Perceiving pitch - Q19 Helmholtz’s place theory - different sound waves stimulate hair cells … This works for higher pitched sounds

Low pitched sounds – Q19 Frequency theory says the entire basilar membrane… The brain interprets this as pitch. Works for low pitched sounds

Perceiving pitch Some combination of place and frequency theory works for all sounds

Locating sound – Q20 Just as two eyes help us locate objects with our vision … Sounds strike each ear at different … Differences are extremely small

Hearing loss – Q21 Sensorineural … Conduction hearing loss … Implants

Touch – Q22 The four senses of touch … Are they distinct?

Pain – Q23 Pain is …… Gate control theory says …

Taste – Q24 The 5 tastes are …. Are there really 5 tastes? Other influences on what we taste …

Smell – Q25 Smell is different … Processing smells ….

Body position – Q26 Kinesthesis …. Vestibular sense … Vestibular sacs and semicircular canals contain fluid and hair cells that react when we move. Hair cells send message to brain

Review Light energy transduced in retina - rods, cones – sent to bipolar cells, ganglions to optic nerve to visual field crossover at optic chiasm to thalamus for more color processing to visual cortex for feature detection to temporal and frontal lobes for integration which is influenced by context, assumptions and expectations

Selective attention – Q27 An animated Necker cube Cocktail party effect Inattentional blindness – 15.php

Muller-Lyer Q28

Organization Q29 Gestalt principles of perception Gestalt therapy

Figure and ground

Grouping Proximity Similarity Continuity

Grouping Connectedness Closure

Depth perception Q30 Innate ability - Gibson & visual cliff Q31 Binocular cues –Retinal … –Conver…

Depth perception Q32 Monocular cues –Relative size –Interposition –Relative clarity

Monocular cues –Texture gradient –Relative height –Relative motion –Light / shadow

Constancies & Other Stuff Q33 Phi phenomenon Q34 Size - distance relationship Size / shape constancy Lightness constancy

Set, expectancy Q35 – Perceptual set Context Expectancy

Your opinion Which of these American minority groups should be admired most? Choose one. Latino Native American African-American