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Perception What we perceive is reality Perception defined Perception is the experience we have after our brain assembles and combines thousands of individual, meaningless sensations into a meaningful pattern or image. Perceptions are rarely exact replicas of the original stimuli, but our perceptions are usually changed, biased, colored, or distorted by our unique set of experiences. Perceptions are our personal interpretations of the real world. 5 Step Process of Changing Sensations into Perception Stimulus Transduction Brain; Primary areas Brain; Association areas Personalized perceptions Step 1: Stimulus Any change of energy in the environment, such as light waves, sound waves, mechanical pressure, or chemicals. Activate stimulus in all receptors such as eyes, ears, nose, taste, skin etc. Step 2: Transduction The stimuli such as the eyes transform or change all of the stimuli into neural impulses that go to the brain as electric signals. Step 3: Brain Primary Areas Impulses from stimuli are converted to impulses and are sent to primary areas of the brain. From ear to temporal lobe, touch to parietal lobe, eyes to occipital lobe etc. Step 4: Brain Association Areas Once in the primary areas, the meaningless information from the stimuli are sent to the association parts of the brain to be converted into meaningful images called perception. Step 5: Personalized Perceptions All perceptions gathered by the brain from the stimuli are then mixed with our personal set of experiences, emotions, and memories stored in different areas of the brain giving us a changed, bias, and distorted reality. Perceptual Constancy Refers to our tendency to perceive sizes, shapes, brightness, and colors as remaining the same even though their physical characteristics are constantly changing. Size Constancy Refers to our tendency to perceive objects as remaining the same size even when their images on the retina are continually growing or shrinking. A car driving away from you is not actually getting smaller even though it appears to in your vision. Shape Constancy Refers to your tendency to perceive an object as retaining its same shape even though when you view if from different angles its shape in continually changing its image in your eyes. Brightness Constancy Refers to the tendency to perceive brightness as remaining the same in changing illumination. Ex: bright colored clothes in a dimly lit closet look dull, but they are still bright. Color Constancy Refers to the tendency to perceive colors as remaining stable despite differences in lighting. Ex: looking at yellow in sunlight makes it look bright yellow Depth Perception Refers to the ability of your eye and brain to add a third dimension, depth, to all visual perceptions, even though images projected on the retina are in only two dimensions, height and width. Binocular Depth Cues Depend on the movement of both eyes. Bi meaning two and ocular meaning eye. Convergence and Retinal Disparity. Convergence A binocular depth cue for depth perception based on signals sent from muscles that turn the eyes. To focus on near or approaching objects, these muscles turn the eyes inward, toward the nose. The brain uses the signals in these muscles to determine the distance of the object. Retinal Disparity A binocular depth cue that depends on the distance between the eyes. Because of their different positions, each eye receives a slightly different image. The difference between the right and left eye’s images is the retinal disparity. Large disparity= close object Small disparity= far object