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Published bySharleen Goodwin Modified over 9 years ago
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Perception Illusion A false representation of the environment
Selection Organization Interpretation
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Illusory Contours Perceived edges that do not physically exist
Visual system fills in the gaps Inspired Gestalt School: Max Wertheimer ( ) Wolfgang Kohler ( ) Kurt Koffka ( ) Gestalt Grouping Rules
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Perception: Selection
Selective attention “Cocktail party effect” The process whereby the brain sorts out, and only attends to, the important messages from the senses. Feature detectors Specialized cells in the brain that respond only to certain sensory information. Based on experience. Habituation The tendency of the brain to ignore environmental factors that remain constant.
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Perception: Organization
Form Constancy Color Depth
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Organization: Form Gestalt
ability to perceive the whole stimulus rather than perceiving its discrete part as separate entities good continuation
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Organization: Form Figure and Ground
see a main object relative to ground
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Organization: Form Proximity
items near each other are grouped together
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Organization: Form Continuity perceive smooth as continuous patterns
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Organization: Form Closure fill in the gaps
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Organization: Form Similarity
image chunks that are similar to each other will be grouped together
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Violations of Perceptual Organization by Form: Ambiguous Figure
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Violations of Perceptual Organization by Form: Ambiguous Figure
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Violations of Perceptual Organization by Form: Impossible Figure
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Violations of Perceptual Organization by Form: Impossible Figure
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Violations of Perceptual Organization by Form: Impossible Figure
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Organization by Constancy
Perceptual Constancy: the tendency for the environment to be perceived as remaining the same even with changes in sensory input Size Shape Color Brightness
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Organization by Color Trichromatic Theory: Opponent-Process Theory:
color perception results from mixing three distinct color systems - red, green, and blue Opponent-Process Theory: color perception is based on three systems of color opposites - blue-yellow, red-green, and black-white
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Organization by Depth Depth Perception:
the ability to see three dimensions although the images that strike the retina are in two dimensions Binocular Cues Monocular Cues
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Depth Perception
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Binocular Cues: Retinal Disparity
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Binocular Cues: Retinal Disparity
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Monocular Cue: Relative Size
assuming same size can discriminate distance
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Monocular Cue: Interposition blocked objects will appear closer
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Monocular Cue: Relative Clarity
hazy objects are perceived to be further away
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Monocular Cue: Texture Gradient
coarse objects are perceived as being closer
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Monocular Cue: Relative Height
higher objects are perceived to be farther away
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Monocular Cue: Relative Motion
nearer things are perceived to move faster
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Monocular Cue: Linear Perspectives
more line convergence gives the perception of greater distance
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Monocular Cue: Relative Brightness
dimmer is perceived to be farther away
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Perception: Interpretation
Perceptual Adaptation we adapt to changes in perceptions Perceptual Set previous experiences affect our perceptions Individual Motivation personal interests affect our perceptions Frame of Reference perceptions change as context changes
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Object Recognition Naïve Template Theory
Visual object would have to match existing template to be perceived Structural Description Theories Visual object is recognized by its specific parts and the relationships between its parts. Multiple Recognition Committees Visual objects are recognized by multiple means simultaneously Grandmother Cell Theory Single cells are responsible for recognizing specific objects
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Naïve Template Theory
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Structural Description Theories
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Multiple Recognition Committees
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Grandmother Cell Theory
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