Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive...

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Sensation and Sensation and Perception Perception

Transcript of Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive...

Page 1: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Sensation and PerceptionSensation and Perception

Page 2: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

What are Sensation and Perception?

• Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell, and hearing)– The information goes to the

CNS, where the brain interprets it

• Perception is our interpretation of that information and how we react to it– We perceive information

based on learning, past experiences, and attitudes

Page 3: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Absolute ThresholdsAbsolute Thresholds An absolute threshold is the weakest amount of a stimulus that can An absolute threshold is the weakest amount of a stimulus that can

be sensedbe sensed Scientists have determined absolute thresholds for all five senses Scientists have determined absolute thresholds for all five senses

for the average person, but they vary by individualfor the average person, but they vary by individual Absolute thresholds for humans are different than those for animals Absolute thresholds for humans are different than those for animals

(a dog’s hearing threshold is very different from ours(a dog’s hearing threshold is very different from ours

Page 4: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Difference Thresholds

• A difference threshold is the minimum amount of difference we can detect between two stimuli– Think of hearing the

notes of different keys on a piano

– These differ from person to person as well

Page 5: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Signal Detection TheorySignal Detection Theory Many internal and external forces affect our ability to detect sensory Many internal and external forces affect our ability to detect sensory

informationinformation SDT is the method of taking into account the strength of a stimulus SDT is the method of taking into account the strength of a stimulus

but also environmental influences and an individual’s physical state but also environmental influences and an individual’s physical state and attitudesand attitudes It is much harder to detect the sound of someone’s voice in a quiet room It is much harder to detect the sound of someone’s voice in a quiet room

than it is in a noisy onethan it is in a noisy one The buzzing of fluorescent lights may be more distracting when you are The buzzing of fluorescent lights may be more distracting when you are

stressed or have a headachestressed or have a headache People tend to focus more on what they personally find important People tend to focus more on what they personally find important

and ignore what they find unimportantand ignore what they find unimportant

Page 6: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Sensory Adaptation

• The process by which we become more sensitive to weak stimuli and less sensitive to unchanging stimuli

• When you enter a very dark room, your eyes adapt to the new space and begin to detect weak sources of light

• If you live in the city, your ears adapt to the constant sound of traffic in the background and detect other noise sources

Page 7: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

VisionVision

Page 8: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Light

• Light is electromagnetic energy measured in wavelengths

• Not all light is visible to humans

• Visible light can be filtered into a variety of colors – each color has a different wavelength

• Blue and violet have the shortest wavelengths, red has the longest

Page 9: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

The EyeThe Eye Works similar to a Works similar to a

cameracamera Light enters the eye Light enters the eye

through the pupilthrough the pupil The lens adjusts to the The lens adjusts to the

distance of objects by distance of objects by changing its thicknesschanging its thickness

The image then is The image then is projected onto the retina projected onto the retina – it acts like film in a – it acts like film in a cameracamera

Neurons on the retina, Neurons on the retina, called photoreceptors, called photoreceptors, react to the light and react to the light and send the image to the send the image to the occipital lobe of the brainoccipital lobe of the brain

Page 10: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Rods, Cones, and the Blind Spot

• Rods and cones are types photoreceptors that cover the retina

• Rods – only sensitive to brightness of light, allow us to see in black and white

• Cones detect colors within the light

• The blind spot is the area of the eye that connects to the optic nerve – it does not have rods or cones and does not capture a light image at all

Page 11: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Color and VisionColor and Vision People with normal vision can People with normal vision can

see any color in the visible see any color in the visible light spectrum, but not all light spectrum, but not all animals cananimals can

Cones in the eye are sensitive Cones in the eye are sensitive to certain colors – either blue, to certain colors – either blue, green, or redgreen, or red

When more than one type of When more than one type of cone is stimulated, we can cone is stimulated, we can perceive other colors like perceive other colors like yellow, orange, and purpleyellow, orange, and purple

TVs and computer screens TVs and computer screens use only blue, green, and red use only blue, green, and red pixels to create color imagespixels to create color images

Page 12: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Color Blindness

• People may be partially color blind if they cannot see all of the colors in the color spectrum

• This occurs when cones malfunction or when people are born without a certain type of cone

• Total color blindness occurs when people cannot see any colors, only black and white – this is a really rare condition

Page 13: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Hearing

Page 14: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Sound and Pitch

• Sound is caused by vibrations that travel through the air in waves

• How fast they complete a cycle determines their pitch

• Shorter waves produce a higher pitch

• Longer waves produce a lower pitch

• A violin produces a higher pitch than a cello, which has longer strings and makes longer sound waves

Page 15: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Loudness

• Loudness is measured by the height of sound waves – this is known as amplitude and is measured decibels

• The absolute threshold of sound for humans (0 decibels) is the sound of a ticking watch 20 feet from the ear in a quiet room

Page 16: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

The Ear• Shaped to capture sounds,

vibrate with them, and transmit the sound to the brain

• The eardrum is the thin membrane gateway between the outer and inner ear

• As sound hits the eardrum, it vibrates and transmits the sound to three small bones

• These bones vibrate the cochlea, a small bony tube filled with fluid and neurons that react to movement and send messages to the auditory nerve

• The auditory nerve sends messages to the temporal lobe

Page 17: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Deafness

• Conductive deafness – caused by damage to the middle ear, which amplifies sounds – can be treated with a hearing aid that amplifies noises

• Sensorineural deafness – caused by damage to the inner ear or destruction of neurons in the cochlea, usually from prolonged exposure to loud noises – can be treated (sometimes) with cochlear implants

Page 18: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Smell, Taste, and Touch

Page 19: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Smell

• Smell is linked with taste – when your ability to smell is impaired, your ability to taste decreases

• Molecules in odors travel into the nose and contact receptor neurons high in the nose

• These neurons send messages to the olfactory nerve

• Our sense of smell is highly adaptable and we can quickly lose our awareness of certain smells

Page 20: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Taste

• Our sense of taste is connected to smell, texture, and temperature

• Apples and onions taste very similar, but their odors create very different flavors

• We can distinguish four main taste qualities – sweet, sour, bitter, and salty

• Receptor neurons on the tongue detect various qualities and send information to the brain

• We regularly kill taste receptors, but they grow back within a week – the taste system is the most resilient of our senses

Page 21: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Skin Senses

• Our skin can detect pain, pressure, and temperature – some receptors detect just one type of stimulus while others may detect all three

• Many receptors are located at the roots of our body hair

• They are not evenly distributed – parts of the body have many more receptors than others

Page 22: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Temperature and Pain Receptors

• Temperature receptors are just below the skin, some detect warmth while others detect cold

• Our sense of temperature is adaptable, we acclimate to warmer or cooler settings pretty quickly

• Pain receptors motivate the body to try and stop the painful stimulus

• Sometimes we can overload the brain’s messages to ease pain – rubbing an injury can distract the brain from pain signals

Page 23: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Body Senses

• Vestibular Sense – our sense of balance – tells us when we are upright and whether we are falling or changing speed– Allows us to know that we

are standing up or moving in an elevator when our eyes are closed

• Kinesthesis – the sense that informs people about the position and motion of their bodies– Allows us to touch our nose

with our eyes closed

Page 24: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Perception

Page 25: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

How Do We Organize Sensory Information?

How Do We Organize Sensory Information?

• Our brain learns to use a variety of methods to sort and make sense out of sensory information

• Closure• Figure-ground perception• Proximity• Similarity• Continuity• Common fate

• Our brain learns to use a variety of methods to sort and make sense out of sensory information

• Closure• Figure-ground perception• Proximity• Similarity• Continuity• Common fate

Page 26: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

ClosureClosure• The tendency to

perceive or complete a whole figure even when there are gaps in what your senses tell you

• You try to fit the pieces you have into a familiar pattern to create a whole image

• The tendency to perceive or complete a whole figure even when there are gaps in what your senses tell you

• You try to fit the pieces you have into a familiar pattern to create a whole image

Page 27: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Figure-Ground PerceptionFigure-Ground Perception

• The perception of figures against a background

• our perception can change depending on what we interpret as a background and what we view as a figure

• We use this method of perception every day

• The perception of figures against a background

• our perception can change depending on what we interpret as a background and what we view as a figure

• We use this method of perception every day

Page 28: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

ProximityProximity

• Grouping objects because of its nearness to other objects

• there is no reason to group the objects other than the fact it is located next to other objects

• Grouping objects because of its nearness to other objects

• there is no reason to group the objects other than the fact it is located next to other objects

Page 29: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

SimilaritySimilarity

• The process of grouping similar objects together

• People often perceive of similar objects as being a part of the same group, even if they could be grouped differently

• The process of grouping similar objects together

• People often perceive of similar objects as being a part of the same group, even if they could be grouped differently

Page 30: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

ContinuityContinuity

• People prefer to see smooth, continuous patters rather than disrupted ones

• People prefer to see smooth, continuous patters rather than disrupted ones

Page 31: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Common FateCommon Fate

• People or objects that move together or perform the same action must have the same purpose

• A group of people running in the same direction must all be running to the same place – they have a common fate

• People or objects that move together or perform the same action must have the same purpose

• A group of people running in the same direction must all be running to the same place – they have a common fate

Page 32: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Perception of MovementPerception of Movement

• We perceive movement when we see an object move in relation to other objects

• We look for stable objects to use as markers for movement (buildings, trees, the sidewalk)

• We perceive movement when we see an object move in relation to other objects

• We look for stable objects to use as markers for movement (buildings, trees, the sidewalk)

Page 33: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Stroboscopic MotionStroboscopic Motion

• An illusion of movement• Created by showing a

rapid series of images or objects that are not moving, but each image is just slightly different than the previous one (flip books)

• Movies work in a similar way

• An illusion of movement• Created by showing a

rapid series of images or objects that are not moving, but each image is just slightly different than the previous one (flip books)

• Movies work in a similar way

Page 34: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Depth PerceptionDepth Perception

People use two main cues to gauge distancesMonocular cues – need only one eye to be perceivedPerspective, clearness, overlapping, shadowing are used to determine which objects are closer and which are farther awayBinocular cues – need two eyes to be perceivedRetinal disparity – each retina captures different images of an object (finger test)Convergence – our eyes try to maintain a single image of an object and turn inward, or converge, as the object gets closer

Page 35: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

ConstanciesConstancies

• Everybody creates constancies in their minds

• They are based on size, color, brightness and shape

• Everybody creates constancies in their minds

• They are based on size, color, brightness and shape

Page 36: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Size ConstancySize Constancy

• We perceive of an object to be one size no matter how far away it is and even though is creates a different-sized image on the retina

• We base size constancy on past experiences

• We know that a dog standing 20 feet away is the same size as if it was right next to us, even though our eye senses a smaller image

• We perceive of an object to be one size no matter how far away it is and even though is creates a different-sized image on the retina

• We base size constancy on past experiences

• We know that a dog standing 20 feet away is the same size as if it was right next to us, even though our eye senses a smaller image

Page 37: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Color ConstancyColor Constancy

• We know that certain objects do not change colors even though we may not be able to see the colors

• I know my house is the same color in the nighttime that it is during the day even though I cannot see its color without light

• We know that certain objects do not change colors even though we may not be able to see the colors

• I know my house is the same color in the nighttime that it is during the day even though I cannot see its color without light

Page 38: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Brightness ConstancyBrightness Constancy

• We perceive of an object as being equally bright even when the intensity of light around it changes

• We perceive of an object as being equally bright even when the intensity of light around it changes

Page 39: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Shape ConstancyShape Constancy

• We know that an object does not change shape even though it may look different from various angles

• We know that a door is rectangular even though it may look like a trapezoid from some angles

• We know that an object does not change shape even though it may look different from various angles

• We know that a door is rectangular even though it may look like a trapezoid from some angles

Page 40: Sensation and Perception. What are Sensation and Perception? Sensation is the information we receive from our five senses (sight, taste, touch, smell,

Visual IllusionsVisual Illusions• Sometimes our

constancies cause us to interpret information incorrectly

• The visual cues we use fool our brains into perceiving objects as having a different size, shape, or color than they actually do

• Sometimes our constancies cause us to interpret information incorrectly

• The visual cues we use fool our brains into perceiving objects as having a different size, shape, or color than they actually do