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SENSATION AND PERCEPTION Unit IV Sensation: the process of absorbing information, in the form of energy, from our environment Uses sensory organs and nervous system Perception: the process of organizing and interpreting information to determine what is meaningful Happens in brain What’s in this picture? http://www.pc.rhul.ac.uk/staff/J.Zanker/PS1061/L10/PS1061_10.htm Spiral or circles? http://www.shutterstock.com/pic-84801493/stock-vector-optical-illusion-forces-tosee-a-spiral-when-actually-figures-are-located-on-a-circle.html Bottom-Up Processing Analysis that starts with sensory receptors and works up to the brain’s integration of information Happens when we have no prior knowledge of something usslave.blogspot.com Top-Down Processing Analysis that uses prior knowledge and experience to construct meaning Focusing on details requires effort EX: Aoccdring to rscheearch at CmabrigdeUinervtisy, it deosn’tmttaer in wahtoredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olnyiprmoetnttihng is taht the frist and lsatltteer be at the rghitpclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can still raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamnmniddeos not raederveylteter by istlef but the wrod as a wolhe. Theories on top-down processing Likelihood principal: we perceive the most likely object based on context and experience Hypothesis testing: perception uses sensory data to make and revise hypotheses about the world Selective Attention We consciously focus on a very small amount of the sensory information we take in and ignore the rest Ex: you can have a conversation with one person in a crowded room ADHD may be a lack of selective attention Demonstration! Inattentional blindness We often don’t notice things, especially if we are focused on one thing in particular Video break: a famous experiment on inattentional blindness Research suggests the unconscious may pick up on unnoticed information Change Blindness We often fail to notice changes in our environment Happens when we are distracted from the changed object More quickly noticed when the object is central to the scene You must pay attention to the object at some point to notice a change Paying attention to an object is not always enough to notice a change Video break: Mind Games “Pay Attention” Mindsight? Some people may be able to “sense” change before they find exactly what the change is Using secondary visual system? Or verifying conscious detection of change? Thresholds Absolute threshold: minimum stimulation necessary for detection 50% of the time May change slightly because of lapses of attention, slight fatigue, or other factors Ex: hearing tests Signal Detection Theory Says signal detection depends on experience, expectations, motivations, and alertness Predicts how often weak signals will be picked out of “background noise” Would mean that absolute thresholds vary significantly Ex: TSA agents looking for guns in suitcases Subliminal Stimuli We do sometimes unconsciously sense stimuli below the absolute threshold Priming with images or smells can shape people’s responses to other people This effect is short-lived and mild (doesn’t work for advertising) Difference Thresholds AKA just noticeable difference Three ways to test (discovered by Gustav Fechner): Method of limits: start with a standard stimulus and increase the difference between it and another stimulus until someone notices Method of right and wrong cases: present a pair of stimuli and ask if they are different Method of adjustment: Adjust a stimulus until it is identical to the standard and measure the error Weber’s Law Two stimuli must differ by a constant percentage (not amount) to be perceived as different Weight: 2% Pitch: 0.3% Light intensity: 8% Also applicable to economics Demonstration! Sensory Adaptation Our sensitivity decreases with constant/repetitive stimulation Helps us to focus on changes to the environment more informative/important than things that are always present Ex: disappearing disc Vision Vision Light Energy Wavelength - distance from one peak to another (determines color) Intensity - amount of energy, depends on height of wave, influences brightness Figure 4.10The eye Light rays reflected from the candle pass through the cornea, pupil, and lens. The curvature and thickness of the lens change to bring either nearby or distant objects into focus on the retina. Rays from the top of the candle strike the bottom of the retina and those from the left side of the candle strike the right side of the retina. The candle’s retinal image is thus upside-down and reversed. © 2010 by Worth Publishers Figure 4.11 The retina’s reaction to light © 2010 by Worth Publishers The Eye cont. Light goes through the lens, which focuses light for different distances (accommodation) Image hits retina upside-down Light goes to rods and cones at the back of the retina, causes chemical reaction bipolar cells (middle layer of retina) activate and pass signal to ganglion cells (upper layer of retina) Ganglion cells converge into optic nerve The Eye Cont. Blind spot exists where optic nerve leaves the eye Usually eyes work together to get complete picture and brain will fill in a gap Cones: mostly in/around fovea, spot of central focus on retina; detect color and detail Rods: mostly on peripheral of retina, detect blackand-white, work in dim light Visual Processing Retinal cells send initial information through thalamus to visual cortex Feature detectors respond to specific characteristics - lines, movements, angles Supercell clusters of neurons interpret more complex patterns - faces, complete objects Some supercells are specialized Some integrate information from others Parallel processing: The brain processes color, movement, form, and depth simultaneously Damage to specific areas will disrupt these specific functions Blindsight: research on patients with damage suggests a secondary, intuitive visual system Visual Processing Color Vision Color is a construct of our minds Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory: the eye has 3 types of cones for seeing red, blue, and green All other colors are combinations of those - green and red light make yellow, etc. Color-deficient vision is caused by a lack of one or two types of cones (usually red and/or green) Color-deficiency test Opponent Colors Opponent Process Theory Opponent colors: red-green, blue-yellow, blackwhite Some neurons are turned off by red and on by green and vice versa Modern color theory uses both Young-Helmholtz and opponent-process: color is seen by combinations of cones and then goes through opponent-process cells to visual cortex Hermann Grid Problems with Vision Color deficiency Nearsightedness – lens focuses objects in front of the retina instead of on the retina (see things better up close) Farsightedness – lens focuses objects behind the retina (see things better far away) Blindness due to damage or from birth Hearing Hearing Audition is very sensitive, esp. to human-created sounds Sound waves are air molecules moving in pressurized waves - vibrations Frequency of sound waves determines pitch Amplitude of sound waves determines volume Measured in decibels - 0 = absolute threshold, 10 decibels is a 10x increase in intensity Ex: Conversation at 60 db is 10,000x more intense than 20 db whisper Structure of the Ear Outer Ear: moves sound through auditory canal to eardrum Middle Ear: transfers vibrations from eardrum through 3 tiny bones - hammer, anvil, and stirrup - to cochlea Inner Ear: Hair cells inside the cochlea sway when the cochlea vibrates, triggering neurons to fire Most hearing loss is because of damage to hair cells Loudness is perceived based on the number of hair cells that fire Sensorineural hearing loss Damage to hair cells caused by Sustained noise above 85 decibels Aging Heredity Disease http://health.howstuffworks.com/humanbody/systems/ear/loud-noise-ear.htm Hearing can be restored with cochlear implants – mechanical device wired into ear Theories on Perceiving Pitch Place theory - different pitches trigger activity on different parts of the cochlea Explains Frequency theory - pitch determines how often neural cells all over the cochlea will fire (higher frequency = faster firing) Explains high pitches but not low ones low sounds but not high ones Volley principle - cells alternate firing to get a faster combined frequency Modern sound theory uses a combination of place and frequency theory Locating Sounds Having two ears means we can determine the location of sound Our brains can detect minute differences in the timing and intensity of sound waves between the ears We struggle to identify sounds that are equidistant to both ears (overhead, directly behind, etc) because there is no time lag Cope by cocking your head Other Senses Touch 4 types of skin sensations: pressure, warmth, cold, and pain (only pressure receptors have been identified Hairy skin detects movement and pressure Galbrous skin (no hair) is more sensitive Touch is influenced by top-down processing and expectations (rubber hand experiments) Kinesthesis and Vestibular Senses Kinesthesis is the sense of body position and movement Measured by sensors in joints, tendons, bones, and ears Interacts with vision Related to vestibular sense, which monitors head position and movement Determined by fluid in the semicircular canals of the inner ear – moving fluid activates hair cells Essential for balance Pain Pain alerts us to problems so we can take care of them Many causes of pain trigger the same receptors Some pain signals come from the brain, as with phantom limbs Level of pain depends on social-cultural context We perceive more pain when others are also feeling pain Gate-Control Theory Pain signals travel through spinal cord in small nerve fibers Other sensory signals travel in large nerve fibers Small fiber signals open a “gate” in the spinal cord and you feel pain Large fiber signals or messages from the brain close the gate Stimulating area by rubbing can block pain signals Endorphins limit experience of pain Psychological effects on pain Distraction limits perception of pain We remember peak moment of pain and level of pain at the end of a painful experience Medical procedures can seem less painful if they are longer but the level of pain tapers off Taste 5 taste sensations: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami (savory, meaty) Humans have >200 taste buds, each with 50-100 receptor cells Receptors are mostly specific to one taste sensation, reproduce every 2 weeks Taste sensitivity decreases with age, smoking, and alcohol use Taste Perceptions Brain responds more negatively to a taste when you are warned it will be bad Price of food influences our perception of how good it will taste People prefer familiar foods to unfamiliar ones Tastes (and taste aversions) may be acquired or learned over time Smell (Olfaction) Smell and taste are both chemical senses Molecules of substances are caught in receptor cells in the top of the nasal cavity Different odors activate different combinations of receptors Smell does not go through the thalamus, but it does go past the prefrontal cortex, which helps process emotional memories This may explain why smells are associated so strongly with memories Infants and mothers identify each other by smell The ability to identify scents peaks in early adulthood Attractiveness of smells depends on learned associations Women have slightly better senses of smell than men Sensory Interaction Our senses influence each other, especially smell and taste (ex: no flavor when you have a cold) Vision and hearing work together to help understand language Synesthesia: stimulating one sense causes the perception of another sense Ex: tasting shapes, seeing letters in specific colors