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Sensation and Perception Myers: Ch. 4 Sensation The process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive stimulus from the environment. (information we get from our 5 senses) Perception • The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events Top Down vs. bottom up • Bottom-up processing • Top-down processing – a progression from individual elements to the whole (start small then work your way up) (start focusing on trees, then you pay attention to the forest). – start with the forest and work your attention down to the individual tree. I cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg. The phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan mnid, aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it dseno't mtaetr in waht oerdr the ltteres in a wrod are, the olny iproamtnt tihng is taht the frsit and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it whotuit a pboerlm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. Azanmig huh? yaeh and I awlyas tghuhot slpeling was ipmorantt! • Write down the word I show your side of the classroom do not share it with the other side. • True or False: As long as our eyes are open we are seeing. Selective Attention Selective Attention Inattentional Blindness • Can you count how many passes? • Cell Phones • Deal or no Deal Change Blindness Absolute Thresholds: The minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time. http://www.freemosquitoringtones.org/ Difference threshold • ‘Just noticeable difference’ JND • Weber’s Law: principle that in order to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant percentage • Salary example Signal detection theory • Detection depends on context. • How many of you feel picked on by teachers? Subliminal Persuasion • Stimulus below the threshold • political campaigning (text p. 89) • Priming Write down what you see. Sensory adaptation Raise your hand if you feel your underwear right now. Vision: TED Talk • Color does not really exist. Figure 4.8 The spectrum of electromagnetic energy This spectrum ranges from gamma rays as short as the diameter of an atom to radio waves over a mile long. The narrow band of wavelengths visible to the human eye (shown enlarged) extends from the shorter waves of blue-violet light to the longer waves of red light. © 2010 by Worth Publishers Visible Light waves Anatomy of the eye Figure 4.10 The 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. • I need a volunteer with no significant disturbances in vision. Retina Figure 4.11 The retina’s reaction to light © 2010 by Worth Publishers TRAnsduction • Converting physical signals from the environment into neural signals sent through the nervous system. • Visual transduction occurs in the retina Ganglion Cells Visual Process cont… Figure 4.13 Pathway from the eyes to the visual cortex Ganglion axons forming the optic nerve run to the thalamus, where they synapse with neurons that run to the visual cortex. © 2010 by Worth Publishers Feature detectors Figure 4.14 The telltale brain Looking at faces, houses, and chairs activates different brain areas in this right-facing brain. © 2010 by Worth Publishers Parallel Processing Figure 4.15 Parallel processing Studies of patients with brain damage suggest that the brain delegates the work of processing color, motion, form, and depth to different areas. After taking a scene apart, how does the brain integrate these subdimensions into the perceived image? The answer to this question is the Holy Grail of vision research. © 2010 by Worth Publishers Movement aftereffects The visual Process: beginning to end Figure 4.16 A simplified summary of visual information processing © 2010 by Worth Publishers Figure 4.17 Color-deficient vision People who suffer red-green deficiency have trouble perceiving the number within the design. © 2010 by Worth Publishers Color Vision • Trichromatic Theory—Helmholtz • Three types of receptors in the retina • Red, Green, Blue • Opponent-process theory • Three pairs of receptors in the retina • Red-green • Blue-yellow • Black-white • Afterimage • “On-Off” switch—we will never see bluish-yellow Figure 4.18 Afterimage effect Stare at the center of the flag for a minute and then shift your eyes to the dot in the white space beside it. What do you see? (After tiring your neural response to black, green, and yellow, you should see their opponent colors.) Stare at a white wall and note how the size of the flag grows with the projection distance! © 2010 by Worth Publishers Hearing •Does your voice sound high-pitched when you hear a recording of it? •Plug your ears and talk in a normal voice The Stimulus Input: Sound Waves • Frequency/wavelength • Pitch • Hertz (Hz) • Amplitude • Loudness • Measured in decibels The structure of the ear The ear is divided into the outer, middle and inner ear. The Ear • Outer ear • Auditory canal • Ear drum The Ear • Middle ear • Hammer, anvil, stirrup The Ear • Inner ear • Oval window • Cochlea • Basilar membrane • Auditory nerve • Auditory cortex The structure of the ear Auditory nerve • Auditory Transduction Animation #1 Parts of the Ear • Eardrum = tight membrane that vibrates when struck by sound waves. • Bones of the middle ear = the hammer, anvil, stirrup which vibrate with the eardrum. • Oval window = where the stirrup connects to the cochlea. • Cochlea = a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through which sound waves trigger nerve impulses. • Auditory nerve = nerve which sends the auditory message to the brain via the thalamus. Neural impulse to the brain The Ear Perceiving Loudness • Basilar membrane’s hair cells • Animation Cochlea and loud sounds The Ear Perceiving Pitch • Place theory (animation) • High pitched sounds • Frequency theory • Low pitched sounds • Volley principle (sum of neural firing sequence) The Ear Locating Sounds • Stereophonic hearing • Localization of sounds • Intensity • Speed of the sound Hearing Loss • 60% of US college students suffer from hearing loss (U. of Tennessee) • Informal hearing test—hold your hand up like you’re taking an oath and rub your fingers together • Freehearingtest.com Hearing Loss and Deaf Culture • Hearing loss • Conduction hearing loss • Sensorineural hearing loss • Cochlea implant • Signing • Deafness and diversity • Cross-cultural language Other Senses Smell • Olfaction • Chemical sense • Odor molecules • Olfactory bulb • Olfactory nerve Smell (olfaction) Smell cont… • Anosmia—lack of smell • Does it impact your memory? • Dogs have 200 million smell receptors (however they can’t distinguish between identical twins) • Humans have 10 million Smell and age Taste • Sweet, sour, salty, bitter and Umami • Taste buds • Chemical sense • Age and taste supertasters Taste • Why does toothpaste make OJ taste bad? Touch • Extremely important • Baby monkey not allowed to touch mothers experiences severe unhappiness Touch • Types of touch –Pressure –Temperature –Pain Touch • Kinesthesis—placement of body • Stretch receptors • Golgi tendon organs • Ian Waterman (1972) Case • Vestibular – Placement of head – Semicircular canals – i.e., cats and whiskers Touch • Rubber hand illusion Pain • What would life be like without pain? • Biological Influences • Nociceptors • Gate-control theory • Endorphines Biopsychosocial approach to pain The pain circuit Advertisement assignment: • Watch TV • What sensory cues are being used to market that product? Perceptual Organization Gestalt— “Form or whole” • Tendency to see the big picture • We filter in a way that makes sense to us 1) Form Perception • A. Figure and Ground • ‘Main idea’ of your senses Form Perception cont… • B. Grouping –Proximity –Similarity –Continuity –Connectedness –Closure Form Perception Grouping Form Perception Grouping Form Perception Grouping Form Perception Grouping Form Perception Grouping - Closure 2) Depth Perception – Estimating distance – Visual Cliff – Binocular Cues – Monocular Cues Depth Perception A. Binocular Cues – Retinal disparity—greater disparity between two objects the closer they are. – 3D technology Depth Perception B. Mononocular Cues • Monocular cues –Depth perception cues from one eye. Depth Perception Mononocular Cues • Monocular cues – Relative height – Relative size – Interposition – Linear perspective – Relative motion – Light and shadow Depth Perception Monocular Cues – Relative Height: (elevation) lower=closer Depth Perception Mononocular Cues – Relative Size Depth Perception Mononocular Cues - Interposition Depth Perception Mononocular Cues – Linear Perspective Depth Perception Mononocular Cues – Relative Motion Depth Perception Mononocular Cues – Light and Shadow 3) Motion Perception • Stroboscopic movement • Phi phenomenon 4) Perceptual Constancy • Perceptual Constancy • Shape/size • Lightness • Color Perceptual Constancy a. ) shape and Size Constancies Ames Room Ames Room Perceptual Constancy B) Lightness Constancy • Lightness constancy –Brightness constancy –Relative luminance Perceptual Constancy C) Color constancy –Surrounding context –Surrounding objects Perceptual Interpretation Perceptual Adaptation –Displacement goggles –We have amazing abilities to adapt to distortion Perceptual Set –Mental predisposition –Schemas Perceptual Set Context Effects Perceptual Set Emotion and Motivation • Motivation on perception • “The Bank Job” • Emotions on perception Perception is a Biopsychosocial Phenomenon