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PERCEPTUAL ORGANIZATION.  When we are given a cluster of sensations, we organize them into a “gestalt” or a “whole”  “The whole is greater than the.

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Presentation on theme: "PERCEPTUAL ORGANIZATION.  When we are given a cluster of sensations, we organize them into a “gestalt” or a “whole”  “The whole is greater than the."— Presentation transcript:

1 PERCEPTUAL ORGANIZATION

2  When we are given a cluster of sensations, we organize them into a “gestalt” or a “whole”  “The whole is greater than the sum of the parts.”  We take in sensory information and infer a perception that makes sense to us based on our past experiences.

3 What is a Figure/Ground Relationship?  Discriminate the focus of stimulus from the background. One stimulus can trigger more than one perception.

4 How Do We Organize Stimuli Into a Meaningful Form?  Our mind has “Rules” for Grouping  1. Proximity

5  2. Similarity

6  3. Continuity

7  4. Connectedness

8  5. Closure

9 Examples of Grouping

10

11 DEPTH PERCEPTION  Seeing things in 3 dimensions—but we only have a 2-dimensional retina  Both an innate (born with it) and a learned skill  Utilizes both “binocular” clues and “monocular clues”

12 Visual Cliff Experiment

13 Binocular Clues  Retinal Disparity  Our eyes are about 2 ½ inches apart  Provides an important clue to the relative distance between 2 objects  Retinal disparity is greatest directly in front of your face

14 Let’s Make Finger Sausages!

15 3D Movies Increase Retinal Disparity!

16 It’s More Difficult to Judge Distant Objects  Much less retinal disparity  We depend on monocular depth clues  1. Relative height  2. Relative size  3. Linear perspective  4. Light and shadow  5. Interposition  6. Relative Motion

17 We Depend on Monocular Clues 1. Relative height: We perceive object higher in our visual field as being further away.

18 We Depend on Monocular Clues But…

19 We Depend on Monocular Clues  2. Relative Size: If we assume that 2 objects are roughly the same size, we perceive the one that “looks” smaller (casts a smaller retinal image) to be further away

20 We Depend on Monocular Clues  3. Linear Perspective: The more parallel lines converge (come together), the greater their perceived distance.

21 We Depend on Monocular Clues  4. Light and Shadow: Nearby objects reflect more light to our eyes. If 2 objects identical in shape and size, the dimmer one appears further away. Also, our brain “assumes” that light comes from above.

22 We Depend on Monocular Clues  5. Interposition: If one object blocks the view of another, we perceiving the “blocking” object as being closer.

23 We Depend on Monocular Clues  6. Relative Motion: If we ourselves move, objects that are actually stable may appear to move.

24 Let’s Review Depth Perception Reviewing Depth Perception

25 MOTION PERCEPTION  Shrinking objects are retreating  Enlarging objects are approaching  Large objects appear to move slower than smaller objects moving at the same speed Tennis Shoe and Batteries

26 Motion Perception  Stroboscopic Movement

27 Motion Perception  Phi Phenomenon Phi Phenomenon

28 PERCEPTUAL CONSTANCY  How we recognize objects without being deceived by changes in their:  Shape  Size  Brightness  Color

29 Shape Constancy

30  But we can be fooled

31 Size Constancy

32  But we can be fooled…

33 Color & Light Constancy

34 Light Constancy  But we can be fooled… 6.5.4 Perceptual Constancy

35 PERCEPTUAL INTERPRETATION  Life experience has a huge impact

36 Perceptual Adaptation  Can we change how we perceive?

37 Perceptual Set  Emotions, expectation, and context ALL influence our perceptions

38 The Brain is a Great ‘Face Detector’

39 It’s All About Context

40 Even Culture Influences Context


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