* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Sensa1on and Percep1on
Neural engineering wikipedia , lookup
Visual selective attention in dementia wikipedia , lookup
Haemodynamic response wikipedia , lookup
Aging brain wikipedia , lookup
Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup
Holonomic brain theory wikipedia , lookup
Endocannabinoid system wikipedia , lookup
Neuroplasticity wikipedia , lookup
Binding problem wikipedia , lookup
Development of the nervous system wikipedia , lookup
Optogenetics wikipedia , lookup
Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup
Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Time perception wikipedia , lookup
Neuroesthetics wikipedia , lookup
Brain Rules wikipedia , lookup
Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup
Molecular neuroscience wikipedia , lookup
Neural correlates of consciousness wikipedia , lookup
Embodied cognitive science wikipedia , lookup
Sensory cue wikipedia , lookup
Sensory substitution wikipedia , lookup
Channelrhodopsin wikipedia , lookup
Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Feature detection (nervous system) wikipedia , lookup
Sensa&onandPercep&on PSYC111-Lecture5 Dr.J.Nicol Sensa&onandPercep&on • Sensa&onistheactofusingoursensoryreceptorsto detectthepresenceofas&mulusandtotransmitan electricalsignaltothebrainwithinforma&onaboutit • Signalissenttothebrainwhereitisfurtherprocessed andinterpreted,thisprocesswhichalsoinvolves recogni&onandiden&fica&oniscalledpercep&on • Thetransforma&onofphysicalenergyfromthe environmentintoanelectricalsignalinthenervous systemiscalledtransduc&on SensorySystems • Sensoryreceptorsreceives&mulusinforma&onand conductthatinforma&ontospecificpartsofthebrain thatareresponsibleforprocessingthatkindofsensory informa&on • Eachsystemconsistsof:sensoryreceptors,neural pathways,andbrainareasthatareinvolvedin percep&on • Sensa&onandpercep&onoccurdifferentlyineachof oursensorymodali&es,butoursensessharesome commonprocesses SensoryReceptorCells Eachofoursenseshasasetofspecializedcellsthat convertaspecificformofphysicalenergyintoneural impulses-thisconversioniscalledsensorytransduc&on SensoryAdapta&on • Oursensorysystemsaredesignedtodetectchangesin theenvironment • HelpsusfocusouraQen&ononlyonwhatisimportant intheenvironment,byrespondingtothecon&nual presenceofthesames&mulusortoarepe&&ve s&muluswithaprogressivelyweakerresponse • Adap&vebecauseitkeepsthebrainfrombeing overloadedwithredundantincominginforma&on • Canbeovercomebyexposuretoamuchstronger s&mulus SensoryThresholds • Sensoryreceptorshavedetec&onthresholds-theydo notdetectallthes&mulithatareintheenvironment, onlythosethatareofaminimumlevelofintensity • Thresholdslimitourabili&es,buttheyareadap&ve becausetheypreventusfrombeingdistractedbysmall andunimportantchangesintheenvironment • Psychophysics:afieldthatexaminestherela&onship betweenthephysicalcharacteris&csofas&mulusand thepsychologicalpercep&onofthats&mulus SensoryThresholds • Absolutethreshold:theminimumamountofs&mulus energythatisnecessaryforsensorydetec&on • Differencethreshold:thesmallestdifferencebetween twos&mulithatcanbedetected(i.e.,JND) • Signaldetec&ontheory:ourabilitytodetects&muli thatarepresentedatnearthresholdlevelsis determinedbytwoprocesses: • Sensorysensi&vity(i.e.,asensoryprocess) • Responsebias(i.e.,adecisionprocess) Goodperformanceinadetec&ontaskrequirestheabilityto accuratelyreportwhenatargetispresentANDwhenitisnot PerceptualProcessing • Percep&oninvolvesbothsimultaneousboQom-upand top-downprocessing • BoQom-upprocessing:transduc&onofenvironmental s&muliintoneuralimpulsesthatproceedintomore complexbrainregions(i.e.,froms&mulusup) • Top-downprocessing:ledbycogni&veprocessessuch asmemory,knowledge,andperceptualexpecta&ons Sensa&onWithoutPercep&on • Experienceislimitedtotheenergythatcanabsorbed bysensoryreceptorsandconvertedtoneuralimpulses transmiQedtothebrain(Goldstein,2014) • Ateverywakingmomentthereismoreinforma&on impingingonoursensorysystemsthanwecanprocess • Muchofwhattakesplacearoundusgoesundetected byourperceptualsystems!(Simons&Chabris,1999) Chabrisetal.(2011) Greenwaldetal.(1991) Greenwaldetal.(1991) Merikle&Skanes(1992) Strahanetal.(2002) Zajonc(1980) deGrootetal.(2012) deGrootetal.(2012) VisualSensa&on • Electromagne&cradia&onproduceslightwhichisthe s&mulusforvision • Lightismadeupofpar&clescalledphotonsandit travelsinwaves • Thevisiblespectrumoflightisbetweenapproximately 400and700nanometresinwavelength • Thedifferentwavelengthswithinourvisiblespectrum appeartousasdifferentcolours Thepartoftheelectromagne&cspectrumthatourvisual receptorscandetectisrestrictedtoanarrowrange Threephysicalcharacteris&csoflightaffectvisualpercep&on VisualSensa&on • Threephysicalcharacteris&csoflightaffectthree psychologicaldimensionsofourvision: • Hue:referstotheexperienceofcolourbasedonthe wavelengthoflightthatas&mulusemitsorreflects • Brightness:referstotheintensityoflightthanan objectemitsorreflects • Satura&on:referstothepurityofcolour • Usingthesethreedimensionswecandiscriminate betweensevenmilliondifferentcolours(Geldard,1972) MajorStructuresoftheEye MajorStructuresoftheEye • Lightentersthevisualsystemthroughtheeye • Cornea:atransparentstructurecoveringthefrontoftheeye • Irissurroundsthepupilanddetermineshowmuchlightgets tothebackoftheeyebydila&ngorconstric&ngthepupil • Lens:changesshapetoallowustofocusonobjectsthatare nearorfaraway • Lensfocuseslightthatenterstheeyeontonervecellsinthe backoftheeyecalledthere&na • Ourabilitytoseeisbasedthetransduc&onoflightinto electricalimpulsesbythephotoreceptorsinourre&na Re&nalphotoreceptors(rodsandcones)transducelightinto neuralimpulsesthatthebraincanprocessasavisualsignal Re&nalPhotoreceptors • Re&naiscomprisedtotwokindsofphotoreceptors • Rodsenableustoseeinpoorlightbecausetheyare highlysensi&vetolight,butarenotsensi&vetospecific wavelengthsoflightsodonotenableustoseecolour • Conesaresensi&vetospecificwavelengthsoflight,so werelyonthemforcolourvision • Thefovea,inthecentreoftheeyewherevisionis sharpest,iscompriseden&relyofcones • Peripheralre&nacontainssomecones,butmainlyrods Photoreceptorss&mulatebipolarcells,which inturncausere&nalganglioncellstofire Axonsofre&nalganglioncellsformtheop&cnerve whichexitstheeyethroughtheop&cdisk(blindspot) TheVisualSystem VisionintheBrain • Visualinforma&onleavingthere&natravelsviathe op&cnervetoneuronsinthesuperiorcolliculus, whichthencommunicateswiththethalamus • Fromthethalamus,visualinputtravelstotheprimary visualcortex(PVC)intheoccipitallobe,whereitis processedtoenablethedetec&onofsimplefeatures (Hubel&Weisel,1959) • Detec&onofcomplexvisuals&mulioccursasaresult ofcircuitryinvolvingassocia&onareasofvisualcortex “Where/How”(parietal)cor&calvisualpathway processesinforma&onaboutthespa&alloca&onofan objectandhowwecangraspit “What”(temporal)visualpathwayprocesses informa&onabouttheiden&tyofanobject Spa&alneglectresultsfromdamageto the“where/how”visualpathway Visualagnosia(e.g.,prosopagnosia)results fromdamagetothe“what”visualpathway GestaltPrinciplesofGrouping • Ourbrainsareorganizedtofillinmissingpartssothatwe perceiveandrecognizemeaningfuls&muli • Gestaltpsychology:focusedonunderstandingprinciplesin whichweperceiveandrecognizevisuals&muliintheiren&rety despitelimitedinforma&on(Kohler,1929;Wertheimer,1923) • TheGestaltprinciplesofformpercep&oncharacterizemuchof ourperceptualorganiza&on(Palmer,1992) • Theprimaryno&onunderlyingtheGestaltapproachisthelaw ofPräegnanz:wetendtoperceiveavisualsceneinawaythat mostsimplyorganizesthedifferentelementsintoastableand coherentform Figure-groundsegrega&on:percep&onisorganized bydis&nguishingbetweenafigureandabackground Wearebiasedtoperceives&mulithatarelowerina visualsceneasbeingthefigureratherthantheground Veceraetal.(2002) EachGestaltgroupingprincipledemonstratesthe fundamentallowofPräegnanz,whichstatesthat throughpercep&onweunifydisparatevisuals&muli intoacoherentandstablewhole PerceptualConstancy • Perceptualconstanciesdescribeourtendencytoview objectsasunchangingeventhoughtheactualvisual sensa&onsareconstantlyshiping(Goldstein,2010) • Colourconstancy:ourpercep&onofcoloursremains constantasillumina&onchanges • Sizeconstancy:oncewehavelearnedthesizeofan objectweassumethatitdoesnotchange • Shapeconstancy:oncewehavelearnedhowanobject isshapedweassumethatitdoesnotchange PerceptualConstancy • Perceptualconstancieshelpusmakesenseofthe constantlychanging,perceptuallyconfusingworld • Perceptualillusionsoccurwhenourassump&ons aboutperceptualconstanciesareextendedto situa&onswheretheydon’tapply TheAmesRoom Muller-LyerIllusion Ourexperienceofcolourisshapedbyphysiological mechanisms,bothinthereceptorsandinopponentneurons Trichroma&cTheoryofColourVision • Trichroma&ctheoryappliestothefirstlevelofcolourvision, whichoccursinthere&na • Accordingtothistheory,therearethreedifferenttypesof conesinthere&naandeachtyperespondstoadifferentrange ofwavelengthsoflight • Shortwavelengths:givesrisetoexperienceofblue-purple • Mediumwavelengths:givesrisetoexperienceofgreen • Longwavelengths:givesrisetoexperienceofred-yellow • Thethousandsofcoloursthatweseearetheresultofthe combinedac&vityofthesethreetypesofconephotoreceptors Threedifferenttypesofconephotoreceptors respondmaximallytodifferentwavelengthsoflight Opponent-ProcessTheory ofColourVision • Opponent-processtheoryappliestothesecondstageof colourvision,whichoccursinganglioncellsinthere&naand inneuronsinthethalamusandvisualcortex • Theoryassertsthatcoloursexistinpairsthatworktoinhibit oneanotherwithrespecttocolourpercep&on • Opponent-processcellsanalyzeinforma&onintermsof antagonis&copponentcolourpairs:red-green;yellow-blue; black-white • Opponent-processingistheresultofac&vityinthethalamus calledtheLGN-inputstothisnucleusfromonecolourofan opposingpairinhibitthosefromtheothercolourinthepair Opponent-ProcessTheory ofColourVision • Cellsthatfireinresponsetoapar&cularcolourstop firingwhenthatcolourisremoved,justastheywould iftheopposingcolourwerepresent • Aperimageshappenwhenonecolourinanopponent pairinhibitstheother • Whenwereleasethisinhibi&onbylookingawayfrom thefirstcolour,thepreviouslyinhibitedcolour overcompensatesandcreatesanimageinthe opposingcolour AuditorySensa&on • Asounds&mulusoccurswhenthemovementsor vibra&onsofanobjectcausepressurechangesinan elas&cmedium(e.g.,air,water)surroundingtheobject • Whenpressurechangespushmoleculestogetherand increasedensityitiscalledcondensa&on • Whenpressurechangescausemoleculestospread out,anddensitytodecrease,itiscalledrarefac&on S&mulusforsoundisawaveofpressurethatis createdwhenatransmirngsubstancevibrates Vibra&onscausemoleculesinthetransmirng substancetomovetogetherandapart PhysicalCharacteris&csofSound • Thephysicalcharacteris&csofthesoundwave determinehowitisexperiencedpsychologically • Pitch:thepsychologicaldimensionrelatedtothe frequencyofthesoundwave(e.g.,1Hz=1cycle/sec) • Loudness:thepsychologicaldimensionrelatedtothe intensityofthesoundwave’spressure(i.e.,amplitude) (measuredindecibels) StructuresoftheEar TheOuterEar • Pinnae:s&cksoutfromthesideofthehead • Soundwavespassthroughtheouterear,throughthe earcanaltoanoval-shapedtotympanicmembrane (i.e.,theeardrum) • Soundwavescausetheeardrumtovibrate • Vibra&onsonthetympanicmembranearetransmiQed tostructuresinmiddleear Thethreebonesofthemiddleeartransmitthevibra&ons ofthetympanicmembranetotheinnerear TheMiddleEar • Movementoftheossicles(i.e.,threesmallestbonesin thebody)intensifiestheforceofthevibra&on • Malleus(hammer)isaQachedtothetympanic membrane,ittransmitsthevibra&onsthatitreceives totheincus(anvil)whichsubsequentlytransmitsits vibra&onstothestapes(s&rrup) • Thestapesthentransmitsitsvibra&onsignalintothe innerearbypushingontheovalwindow,amembrane thatseparatestheossiclesandtheinnerear TheInnerEar • Mainstructureoftheinnerearisthecochlea-a liquid-filled,coiledtubularstructure • Liquidinsidethecochleavibratesinresponsetothe movementofthestapesagainsttheovalwindow(i.e., theinner-earfluidformsawaveinsidethecochlea whichdeflectsalongthebasilarmembrane) • Basilarmembraneiscoveredinrowsofhaircells(or cilia),whicharetheauditorysensoryreceptors Haircellsrestonthebasilarmembraneofthecochlea Vibra&onofthecochlearpar&&oncauses mo&onofthebasilarmembrane TheInnerEar • Movementofthebasilarmembranebendsthehair cellswhichtransducethe(fluid)soundwaveintoan electricalsignal • Haircellscommunicatewiththeauditorynerve,which sendsthesignaltothebrain • Signaltravelstothemedialgeniculatenucleus(MGN) inthethalamus,andisthenrelayedtotheprimary auditorycortexinthetemporallobe Iden&fyingFrequencyandPitch • Frequencytheory:thepercep&onofpitchisrelatedtothefrequencyat whichthebasilarmembranevibrates • Differentfrequenciesareconvertedintodifferentratesofac&on poten&alsinourauditorynerves • High-frequencysoundscreateshort,fastwavesandlow-frequency soundscreatelong,slowerwaves • Placetheory:howweperceivepitchisbasedontheloca&on(place) alongthebasilarmembranethatsounds&mulates • High-frequencysoundss&mulatehaircellsnearthebaseofthe cochleaandlow-frequencysoundss&mulatehaircellsattheendof thecochlea • Frequencyisindicatedbytheplacewherenervefiringisthehighest Tac&leSensa&on • Skinprovidesinforma&onaboutthes&mulithatwe comeincontactwith(e.g.,hot,cold,rough,pain) • Facilitatesinterac&onintheenvironmentbecauseit preventsusfromgernginjured(e.g.,familial dysautonomia)andallowsustofeelthepleasurefrom beingtouched(e.g.,contactcomfort,sex) • Alsokeepsbodilyfluidscontained,andprevents harmfulagentsfromenteringthebody(e.g.,dirt, bacteria,chemicals) Theskincontainsavarietyofsensoryreceptors thatregisterdifferenttypesofphysicals&muli SomatosensoryPathwaystotheCortex SomatosensoryCortex Nocicep&vepainreceptorsintheskin Tac&lePercep&onofPain • Largeindividualdifferencesinpainthresholdandthe degreetowhichitcausesemo&onalsuffering • Peopledifferintheirsensa&onandpercep&onofpain duetophysicaldifferencesintheirsensorysystems • Womenhavealowerthresholdfordetec&ngpain comparedwithmen(Garciaetal.,2007) • People’sbrainsreactdifferentlydependingonhow sensi&vetheyaretopain(Dubeetal.,2009) GateControlTheoryofPain • PaQernsofneuralac&vitycreatea“gate”preven&ngpain messagesfromreachingthebrain(Melzack&Wall,1965) • Ga&ngmechanismdeterminesthestrengthofthepain signalthatentersthebrainfromthespinalcord • Ga&ngmechanismstrengthmayexplainindividual differencesinpainsensi&vity(Romanelli&Esposito, 2004) • Painpercep&onisdeterminedbyabalancebetween inputfromphysical(i.e.,nociceptorsintheskin)and cogni&vefactors(e.g.,expecta&on,aQen&on,distrac&on) PhantomLimbPain • Amputeesopenfeelpainfrombodypartthathasbeenremoved • Neuronsinthebrainthatarerelatedtoourbodilysensa&ons produceabnormalpaQernsofac&vityandtheresultcanbepain (Melzack,1992) • Inaddi&ontorespondingtoincomingpainsignalsthebrainis alsocapableofgenera&ngpainonitsown • Phantomsensa&onsaretheresultofabnormalac&vityinthe somatosensorycortex • Whenthelimbisremoved,thepartofthesomatosensorycortex thatpreviouslyreceiveditsinputisinnervatedbyinputsfrom intactbodyparts(Ramachandran,2005) (Ramachandran&Rogers-Ramachandran,1996) TheChemicalSenses • Smellandtasteinvolveresponsestochemicals,so togethertheyarecalledthechemicalsenses • Bothsensesemergedearlyinourevolu&onaryhistory andtheirvalueisopenunderes&mated(Doty,1986) • Gatekeepersofthebody:iden&fythingsthatshouldbe consumed,detectthingsthatwouldbeharmfuland shouldberejected OlfactorySensa&on • Sensa&onintheolfactorysystembeginswhen chemicalscalledodourantsenterthenose • Chemicalodourantsaretransducedintoneuralsignals whentheycomeintocontactwiththeciliaofolfactory sensoryreceptorneuronslocatedinthenasalmucosa • Whenodourantsenterthenosetheybindtoreceptors locatedonolfactorysensoryreceptorneurons • Anac&onpoten&aloccursinolfactorysensory receptorneuronswhenenoughodourantmolecules bindtoreceptors Olfactoryreceptorneuronstransduceinforma&on fromodourantmoleculesthatenterthenose Thisinforma&oniscarriedbytheolfactorynerveinto thebrainwhereitsynapsesintheolfactorybulb OlfactorySensa&on • Ourthresholdsfordetec&ngodourshaveawide distribu&on:somewecandetecteasily,butnotaswell • Ourabilitytodetectodoursismuchpoorerthanmany otheranimals(e.g.,dogsare300-10,000&mesmore sensi&ve) • Differencesinsensi&vityarenotcausedbythe sensi&vityofsensoryreceptors,ratheritisbecausewe havefarfewerreceptorsthanmacrosma&canimals • Althoughwedohavegooddetec&onthresholdsfor someodours,ourrecogni&onthresholdsarequitepoor OlfactoryPercep&on • Signalsfromourolfactoryreceptorneuronstravelto thebrainthroughtheolfactorynerve • Firstthisinforma&ontravelstotheolfactorybulbat thebaseofthebrainbeneaththefrontallobes • Olfactoryinforma&onthensenttocor&calregions involvedinrecognizinganddiscrimina&ngodours • TheabilityofourcortextorecognizepaQernsofinputs fromavarietyofolfactoryreceptorsisprobablyhow weareabletodetectcertainodours OlfactoryPercep&on • Theolfactorybulbprojectstotheamygdala,aswellas indirectlytothehippocampus,anareaimportantfor learningandmemory • Abilityofsmellstoelicitmemoriesisprobablyrelated toolfactoryconnec&onstothehippocampusand amygdala(Lehrer,2007) Flavourisdeterminedbytasteandodour:withoutsmell itisdifficulttoiden&fythetasteoffoodonthetongue Gustatory(Taste)Sensa&on • Flavourisacombina&onofsmellandtaste • Tasteoccursbecausechemicalss&mulatesensoryreceptorsonthe tongue,whichare&nybumpsarecalledpapillae • Tonguecontainsfourdifferenttypesofpapillae:filiform,fungiform, foliate,circumvilliate • Papillaearelinedwithtastebuds,whicharelikenestsoftastereceptor cells,eachcontaining60-100sensoryreceptorcells • Tastereceptorcellshaveciliathatcontainthesensoryreceptors,these ciliaextendthroughtheporesofthetastereceptorandareexposedto whatisinourmouth • Eachofthefivemajortastereceptorsrespondstospecifictastein food:sweet,sour,biQer,salty,umami Thereare9,000tastebudsinhumangustatorysystem Receptorcellsfortasteareclusteredwithinthetaste budsfoundinthepapillae(bumps)thatcoverthetongue Gustatory(Taste)Percep&on • Tasteinforma&onisintegratedwithrewardcircuitsin thebrain(Norgrenetal.,2006) • Informa&onabouttasteandsmellisprocessedin separatepathwaysthatconvergeintheprefrontal cortex(PFC) • Insulaisac&vatedwhenwetaste,smell,orevensee somethingthatisdisgus&ng(Calderetal.,2007) IndividualDifferencesinSmellandTaste • Femalesaremoresensi&vetosmellthanmales,and theirsensi&vityvarieswiththemenstrualcycle(Derntl etal.,2013) • Higherpropor&onof“super-tasters”arefemales(i.e., sensi&vetoaspecificbiQersubstance) • Heightenedsensi&vityofbothchemicalsensesin femaleslikelyhasadap&vesignificance