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Sensation & Perception Chapter 8 1 Section 1 • Sensations allow humans to understand reality. Sensations occur anytime a stimulus activates a receptor. • Objectives • Describe the field of study known as psychophysics • Define and discuss threshold, Weber’s law and signal detection 2 Discovering a New World • Helen Keller- discovered new ways to experience the world • She entered a world of sensations after she began organizing the stimuli in her world • Try it yourself 3 Read This • In the next few seconds, something peculiar will start hap pening to the material youa rereading. Iti soft ennotre alized howcom plext heproces sof rea ding is. 4 Organization • Your success in gathering information from your environment, interpreting this information, and acting on it depends considerably on its being organized in ways you expect. 5 Stimulus • The world is filled with physical changes • alarm clock sounds, switch flips on a bright light, you stumble against a door • Stimulus- any aspect of or change in the environment to which an organism responds • alarm clock, electric light, sore muscles • can be measured in many physical ways • Size, duration, intensity or wavelength 6 Sensation • Sensation- occurs anytime a stimulus activates one of your receptors • Sense organs detect physical changes in energy such as heat, light, sound, and physical pressure 7 Perception • Perception- the organization of sensory information into meaningful experiences • A sensation may be combined with other sensations and your past experience to yield a perception 8 Psychophysics • The psychological study of such questions as • What is the relationship btw color and wavelength? • How does changing a light’s intensity affect your perception of its brightness? • The goal of the study is to understand how stimuli from the world (such as frequency and intensity) affect the sensory experience (such as pitch and loudness) produced by them 9 Threshold • In order to establish laws about how people sense the external world, psychologists first try to determine how much of a stimulus is necessary for a person to sense it at all • How much of a scent must be in a room before one can smell it? • How much energy is required for someone to hear a sound or to see a light? 10 Threshold Experiment • Participant is place in a dark room and instructed to stare at a blank wall • Instructed to say “I see it” when he is able to detect a light • Psychologist uses an extremely precise machine that can project a low-intensity beam of light against the wall • Then done in reverse 11 Water Check • Get two different cups of water from the back of the room. 12 Absolute Threshold • The weakest amount of a stimulus required to produce a sensation (detected 50% of the time) • • • • • Vision- candle flame 30 miles away Hearing- watch ticking 20 ft away Taste- 1 t of sugar in 2 gallons of water Smell- 1 drop of perfume in a 3-room house Touch- feeling a bee’s wing falling a distance of 1 centimeter onto your cheek 13 Sensory Differences & Ratio • Difference Threshold • Refers to the minimum amount of difference a person can detect between two stimuli half of the time • Just Noticeable Difference- JND • Refers to the smallest increase or decrease in the intensity of a stimulus that a person is able to detect 14 Weber’s Law • The larger or stronger a stimulus, the larger the change required for a person to notice that anything has happened to it • Backpack p 211 • People who can detect small differences in sensation work as food tasters, wine tasters, smell experts, perfume experts … 15 Sensory Adaptation • Senses are most responsive to increases and decreases, and to new events rather than to ongoing, unchanging stimulation • They get used to a new level and respond only to deviations from it • Getting used to a dark theater • Cold swim • Disagreeable odors Figure 8.3 on p 212 • Street noises 16 • Clothes on your body Signal-Detection Theory • The study of people’s tendencies to make correct judgments in detecting the presence of stimuli • Involves recognizing some stimulus against as background of competing stimuli Radar operator • Abandons the idea that there is a single true17 absolute threshold Processing Stimuli • Preattentive process- method for extracting information automatically and simultaneously when presented with stimuli • Attentive process- procedure that considers only one part of the stimuli presented at a time Stroop interference effect- preattentive (automatic) processing acts as an interference. The tendency is to read the word instead of saying the color on ink p 213 Figure 8.4 18 Section 2 • The sense organs- the eyes, tongue, nose, skin, and others- are the receptors of sensations • Objectives • Describe the nature and functioning of the sense organs • Identify the skin and body senses and explain how they work 19 More than five • • • • • • • Vision Hearing Taste Smell Touch Several skin senses Two internal senses • Vestibular and Kinesthetic 20 Vision • Most studied of all the senses • Provides us with a great deal of info abt our environment • Sizes, shapes, locations, textures, colors & distances 21 Parts of the Eye • Pupil- the opening in the iris that regulates the amount of light entering the eye • Lens- a flexible, transparent structure in the eye that changes its shape to focus light on the retina 22 • Retina- the innermost coating of the back of the eye containing the light- sensitive receptor cells responsible for changing light energy into neuronal impulses • Rods • Cones 23 Cones and Rods • Cones- require more light to respond • Best in daylight • 6-7 million • Sensitive to color • Rods- require less light to respond • Night vision • 75-150 million 24 Color Deficiency • Figure 8.7 (p 218) 25 • Optic Nerve- the nerve that carries impulses from the retina to the brain • Blind spot (p 216) 26 Light • Electromagnetic radiation • • • • • Radio waves Microwaves Infrared radiation Ultraviolet rays X rays • Prisms • Electromagnetic Spectrum figure 8.6 (p 217) 27 Hearing • Depends on vibrations in the air- sound waves • Sound waves from the air pass through various bones until they reach the inner ear, which contains tiny hairlike cells that move back and forth • Hair cells change sound vibrations into neuronal signals that travel through the auditory nerve to the brain 28 Loudness & Strength • Loudness- determined by the amplitude (height) of sound waves • The higher the amp the louder the sound • Strength- or sound pressure energy is measured in decibels • 0 decibels- the softest, anything over 110 can damage hearing as can persistent sounds as low as 80 See Figure 8.9 29 Pitch • Depends on sound-wave frequency • Low frequencies produce deep bass • High frequencies produce shrill squeaks • If you hear a sound composed of a combination of different frequencies, you hear the separate pitches even though they occur simultaneously 30 Direction • If a noise occurs on your right, the sound wave comes to both ears, but it reaches the right ear a fraction of a second before it reaches the left 31 The Pathway of Sound • Read p 219 32 Conduction Deafness • Occurs when anything hinders physical motion through the outer or middle ear of when the bones of the middle ear becomes rigid and cannot carry sounds inward • Can be helped with conventional hearing aids • Picks up sound waves, changes them into vibrations and sends they to the inner ear 33 Sensorineural Deafness • Occurs from damage to the cochlea, the hair cells of the auditory neurons • Cannot be helped by traditional hearing aids • May be helped by a cochlear implant • Changes sound waves into electrical signals, these signals are fed into the auditory nerve, which carries them to the brain • The brain then processes the sensory input 34 Balance • Read p 220 35 Smell • Chemical sense • Molecules enter your nose in vapors that reach a special membrane in the upper part of the nasal passages on which the smell receptors are located • These receptors send messages about smell through the olfactory nerve to the brain 36 Taste • Chemical sense • Appropriate chemicals must stimulate receptors in the taste buds on your tongue • Taste info is relayed to the brain along with data about the texture and temperature of the substance • 4 primary sensory experiences • Sour, Salty, Bitter, and Sweet 37 • Flavor- the combining of taste, smell and tactile sensations • Much of what we think of as taste is really the sense of smell • Sensations of warmth, cold, and pressure also effect taste • The chemical senses play a lesser role of pleasure in humans 38 The Skin Senses • Receptors in the skin are responsible for providing the brain with at least four kinds of info about the environment • • • • Pressure Warmth Cold Pain 39 Perceptions of Pain • Pain results from many different stimuli • Sharp, localized pain you may feel immediately • Dull, generalized pain you may feel later • Gate control theory of pain- we can lessen some pains by shifting our attention away from the pain impulse • Rubbing a stubbed toe 40 The Body Senses • Kinesthesis- the sense of movement and bodily position • Comes from receptors in and near the muscles, tendons and joints 41 Section 3 Perception • The way we interpret sensations and organize them into meaningful experiences is called perception • Objectives • Outline the principles involved in perception • Describe how we learn to perceive and what illusions are 42 Perception • The brain receives info from the senses and organizes and interprets it into meaningful experiences • Trying to catch a fly • Bug detector does not know the eye has been rotated • Perception goes beyond reflexive behavior & allows us to confront changes in our environment • Perceptual thinking is essential for us to adapt 43 to change Principles of Perceptual Organization • The brain makes sense of the world by creating whole structures out of bits and pieces of information • Gestalt- each whole that is organized by the brain • German word meaning pattern or configuration • The whole is more than the sum of the parts 44 Closure • When we see a familiar pattern or shape with some missing parts, we fill in the gaps 45 Proximity • When we see a number of similar objects we tend to perceive them as groups or sets of those that are close to each other 46 Similarity • When similar and dissimilar objects are mingled, we see the similar objects as groups 47 Continuity • We tend to see continuous patterns, not disrupted ones 48 Simplicity • We see the simplest shapes possible 49 Figure-Ground Perception • The ability to discriminate properly between a figure and its background • Important in hearing and vision • Allows you to follow one person’s voice at a noisy meeting • When you listen to a piece of music a familiar theme jumps out at you • The melody bcms the figure and the rest of the music is merely background 50 Learning to Perceive • Perceiving is something that people learn to do • Influenced by our needs, beliefs, and expectations • When we want something, we are more likely to see it • Previous experiences influence what we see 51 Subliminal Perception • Subliminal Messages- brief auditory or visual messages presented below the absolute threshold so that there is less than 50% chance that they will be perceived • James Vicary- Movie messages • 1/3000 of a second, once every 5 seconds • Popcorn sales raised 58%, Coke 18% • Anthony Greenwald- 1990 • Memory and self-esteem tapes/ improvement aft52 1 month Depth Perception • Monocular Depth Cues-uses one eye • • • • Relative height- bigger is nearer Interposition- overlapping Light and Shadows- lighter is nearer Texture-density gradient • Motion parallax • Linear perspective • Relative motion 53 • Binocular Depth Cues • Convergence- process by which your eyes turn inward to look at nearby objects • Retinal disparity- bcs each eye occupies a different position each eye receives a slightly different image 54 Constancy • The tendency t percieve certain objects in the same way regardless of changing angle, distance, or lighting 55 Illusions • Illusions- incorrect perceptions • Created when perceptual cues are distorted so that our brains cannot correctly interpret space, size and depth cues 56 Extrasensory Perception • ESP- an ability to gain information by some means other than the ordinary senses Next 57 • Clairvoyance- perceiving objects or information without sensory input • Telepathy- involves reading someone else’s mind or transferring one’s thoughts • Psychokinesis- involves moving objects through purely mental effort • Precognition- ability to foretell events 58