Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Biopsychological Domain

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Biopsychological Domain"— Presentation transcript:

1 Biopsychological Domain

2 Sensation and Perception Chapter

3 Perception

4 Perception The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information

5

6

7 Gestalt Organizational Principles
Module 9: Perception

8 Gestalt The “whole,” or the organizational patterns that we tend to perceive Gestalt psychologists stressed that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. By breaking experiences into their basic parts, something important is lost.

9 A Gestalt

10 I _ope yo_ _et a 1_ _ on t_ _ t_st.

11 Gestalt Organizational Principles: Figure-Ground Relationships
Module 9: Perception

12 Figure-Ground The organization of the visual field into objects (figures) that stand out from their surroundings (ground) The figure is the object(s) that stands out or draws one’s attention. The ground is the background.

13 Figure-Ground

14

15

16 Gestalt Organizational Principles: Grouping Principles
Module 9: Perception

17 Grouping The perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into understandable units Several principles of grouping include: Similarity Proximity Closure Continuity

18 Grouping - Similarity The tendency to place items that look similar into a group

19

20

21 Grouping - Proximity The tendency to place objects that are physically close to each other in a group

22

23

24 Grouping – Closure The tendency to look at the whole by filling in gaps in a perceptual field

25

26

27 Grouping – Continuity The tendency to perceive that movement of an object continues once it appears to move in a particular direction

28

29

30 Depth Perception Module 9: Perception

31 Depth Perception The ability to see in three dimensions and judge distance

32 Visual Cliff A laboratory device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals Infants are reluctant to crawl past the “edge” of the visual cliff Other animals had similar results. Suggests that depth perception, to some extend, is inborn

33 Visual Cliff

34 Depth Perception: Binocular Depth Cues
Module 9: Perception

35 Binocular Cues Depth cues that require the use of both eyes

36 Retinal Disparity A binocular depth cue resulting from slightly different images produced by the retina of the left and the retina of the right eye Is most effective when the item is quite close to the person

37 Binocular Depth Cues: Finger Sausage

38 Convergence A binocular depth cue related to the tension in the eye muscles when the eyes track inward to focus on objects close to the viewer The more tension in the eye muscle, the closer the object is Works best at close distances

39 Depth Perception: Monocular Depth Cues
Module 9: Perception

40 Monocular Cues Depth cues that require the use of only one eye
Monocular depth cues include: relative size, relative motion, interposition, relative height, texture gradient, relative clarity, and linear perspective.

41 Monocular Depth Cues – Relative Size
Using the perceived size of a familiar object to determine depth The larger the object appears, the closer the object is to the viewer

42 Monocular Depth Cues – Relative Motion
A person who is moving can determine depth by focusing on a distant object. Objects further away than the object of focus will appear to move in the same direction as the subject is moving. Objects closer than the object of focus will appear to move in the opposite direction.

43 Relative Motion

44 Monocular Depth Cues – Interposition
Method of determining depth by noting that closer objects partially obstruct the more distant objects Also called “overlap”

45 Monocular Depth Cues – Relative Height
Method of determining depth by noting that distant objects appear higher in your field of vision than do closer objects

46 Monocular Depth Cues – Texture Gradient
Method of determining depth by noting that distant objects have a smoother texture than nearby objects

47 Monocular Depth Cues – Relative Clarity
Method of determining depth by noting that distant objects are less clear than nearby objects Tends to work outdoors

48 Monocular Depth Cues–Linear Perspective
Method of determining depth by noting that parallel lines appear to converge in the distance The lines appears to eventually merge on the horizon.

49 Perceptual Constancy Module 9: Perception

50 Perceptual Constancy Perceiving the size, shape, and lightness of an object as unchanging, even as the image on the retina of the eye changes The understanding that objects usually remain the same

51 Perceptual Constancy: Size Constancy
Module 9: Perception

52 Size Constancy A person’s understanding that as an object moves further or closer to them its actual size stays the same As an object appears to become larger we realize it is getting closer, not bigger. As an object appears to become smaller we realize it is moving farther away, not getting smaller.

53 Size Distance Relationship

54 Size Distance Relationship

55 Size Distance Relationship

56 Perceptual Constancy: Shape Constancy
Module 9: Perception

57 Shape Constancy The understanding that an object’s shape remains the same even though the angle of view makes the shape appear changed

58 Shape Constancy

59 Perceptual Constancy: Lightness Constancy
Module 9: Perception

60 Light Constancy The ability to see an object as having a constant level of lightness no matter how the lighting conditions change

61 Illusion of the Camera Play “Lights, Camera, Magic!” (12:53) Segment #10 from Scientific American Frontiers: Video Collection for Introductory Psychology (2nd edition).

62 Perceptual Set Module 9: Perception

63 Perceptual Set A mental predisposition to perceive something one way and not another Example of top-down processing Influence of the “power of suggestion” (subliminal perception) Guided by schemas: concepts or mental frameworks that organize and interpret information

64 Perceptual Set

65 Subliminal Perception
Play “Studying the Effects of Subliminal Stimulation on the Mind” (4:46) Segment #9 from The Mind: Psychology Teaching Modules (2nd edition).

66 Illusions Module 9: Perception

67 Illusions Misinterpreting sensory stimuli
Help researchers understand how sensation and perception normally works

68 Müller-Lyer Illusion

69 Müller-Lyer Illusion Most people think segment AB equals BC. In reality AB is much longer than BC.

70 Müller-Lyer Illusion

71 Müller-Lyer Illusion

72 Müller-Lyer Illusion

73 Müller-Lyer Illusion Insert “Müller-Lyer Illusion” Video #4 from Worth’s Digital Media Archive for Psychology. Instructions for importing the video file can be found in the ‘Readme’ file on the CD-ROM.

74 Ames Room Illusion

75 Ames Room Illusion

76 Ames Room Illusion: Secret Revealed

77 The End

78 Name of Concept Use this slide to add a concept to the presentation

79 Name of Concept Use this slide to add a table, chart, clip art, picture, diagram, or video clip. Delete this box when finished


Download ppt "Biopsychological Domain"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google