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Sensation and Perception

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Title: Sensation and Perception


1
Sensation and Perception
  • Chapter 3

2
Sensation
LO 3.1 Sensation and the central nervous system
  • Sensation - the activation of receptors in the
    various sense organs.
  • Sensory receptors - specialized forms of neurons.
  • Sense organs
  • eyes
  • ears
  • nose
  • skin
  • taste buds

Menu
3
Eye Sensory Receptors
Sensory receptor
4
Ear Sensory Receptors
Sensory receptors
5
Nose Sensory Receptors
Sensory receptor
6
Skin Sensory Receptors
Pain
Light touch
Cold
Heat
Strong pressure
Hair movement
7
Sensation and Perception
  • Stimulus energy
  • Heat
  • Light
  • Sensory receptor
  • Eyes
  • Nose
  • Skin

Neural impulse
  • Brain
  • Visual
  • Olfactory

Sensation
Perception
8
Sensory Thresholds
LO 3.1 Sensation and the central nervous system
  • Absolute threshold - smallest amount of energy
    needed for a person to consciously detect a
    stimulus (50 of time)
  • Just noticeable difference smallest difference
    between two stimuli that is detectable (50 of
    time)
  • http//www.google.com/search?hlensourcehpqvan
    morrisonintothemysticaqfaqig10aqloqg
    s_rfaiCOBXm3nlkTOXrIouEhQSl6PCFBgAAAKoEBU_Q0NSM

Menu
9
Habituation and Sensory Adaptation
LO 3.1 Sensation and the central nervous system
  • Habituation - tendency of the brain to stop
    attending to constant, unchanging information.
  • Sensory adaptation - tendency of sensory receptor
    cells to become less responsive to a stimulus
    that is unchanging.

Menu
10
Light
Amplitude
Wavelength
11
Psychological Aspects to Light
LO 3.2 What is light
  • Brightness - amplitude of the wave higher waves
    brighter lower waves dimmer.
  • Color - length of the wave long wavelengths red
    short waves blue
  • Saturation - purity of the color people see

Saturation
Color
Brightness
Menu
12
Structure of the Eye
LO 3.3 How eyes see and see color
  • Cornea clear membrane that covers surface of
    eye protects eye and focuses most of light
    coming into eye.
  • Pupil hole through which light from the visual
    image enters eye.

Cornea
Pupil
Menu
13
Structure of the Eye
LO 3.3 How eyes see and see color
  • Iris - round muscle can change the size of the
    pupil, letting more or less light into the eye
    helps focus the image.
  • Lens suspended by muscles finishes the
    focusing process begun by the cornea.

Lens
Iris
Menu
14
Retina, Rods, and Cones
LO 3.3 How eyes see and see color
  • Photoreceptors that respond to various light
    waves
  • Rods receptors responsible for non-color vision
    and sensitivity to dim light.
  • Cones receptors responsible for color vision
    and sharpness of vision.

Retina
Cone
Optic nerve
Rod
Menu
15
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16
Visual Field of left eye
Visual field of right eye
Optic nerve
Optic chasm
Primary visual area
17
Color Vision
LO 3.3 How eyes see and see color
  • Trichromatic theory - theory of color vision that
    proposes three types of cones red, blue, and
    green.
  • Opponent-process theory - theory of color vision
    that proposes four primary colors with cones
    arranged in pairs red and green, blue and yellow

Or
Or
Menu
18
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19
Color Blindness
LO 3.3 How eyes see and see color
  • Monochrome colorblindess - either have no cones
    or have cones that are not working at all.
  • Red-green colorblindess - either the red or the
    green cones are not working.

Menu
20
Sound
LO 3.4 What is sound
Amplitude
  • Amplitude volume (how soft or loud a sound is).
  • Wavelength frequency or pitch
  • Purity timbre (a richness in the tone of the
    sound).
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v2RkaD9nAv34.

Wavelength
Quieter
Louder
Deeper pitch
Higher pitch
Menu
21
Structure of the Ear
LO 3.4 What is sound
  • Auditory canal - short tunnel that runs from the
    pinna to the eardrum
  • Eardrum - thin section of skin that tightly
    covers the opening into the middle part of the
    ear

Eardrum
Auditory canal
Menu
22
Structure of the Ear
  • When sound waves hit the eardrum, it vibrates and
    causes three tiny bones in the middle ear to
    vibrate.
  • Hammer
  • Anvil
  • Stirrup

Hammer
Hammer
Stirrup
Anvil
23
Structure of the Ear
LO 3.4 What is sound
  • Cochlea - snail-shaped structure of the inner ear
    that is filled with fluid.
  • Organ of Corti rests in the basilar membrane
    contains receptor cells for sense of hearing.

Organ of Corti
Menu
24
Structure of the Ear
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v7a2aoZeZhZ8feature
related http//www.youtube.com/watch?v8wgfowbbTz
0featurerelated Auditory nerve - bundle of
axons from the hair cells in the inner ear
receives neural message from the organ of Corti.
Auditory nerve
25
Theories of Pitch
LO 3.4 What is sound
  • Pitch - frequency of the sound waves higher
    frequencies are perceived as higher pitches.
  • Place theory - states that different pitches are
    experienced by the stimulation of hair cells in
    different locations on the organ of Corti.

Menu
26
Theories of Pitch
LO 3.4 What is sound
  • Frequency theory - states that pitch is related
    to the speed of vibrations in the basilar
    membrane.

Menu
27
Taste
LO 3.6 Senses of taste and smell
  • Taste buds taste receptor cells in mouth
    responsible for sense of taste
  • Gustation - the sensation of a taste.
  • Five Basic Tastes
  • Sweet
  • Sour
  • Salty
  • Bitter
  • Brothy

Menu
28
Taste
LO 3.6 Senses of taste and smell
Bitter
Taste pore
Sour
Receptor cell
Salty
Sweet
Nerve fiber
Menu
29
Smell
LO 3.6 Senses of taste and smell
  • Olfaction (olfactory sense) sense of smell.
  • Olfactory bulbs - areas of the brain that receive
    information from the olfactory receptor cells.

Receptor
Olfactory bulb
Menu
30
Somesthetic Senses
LO 3.7 Touch, pain, motion and balance
  • Somesthetic senses - the skin senses, the
    kinesthetic sense, and the vestibular senses.
  • Skin senses - the sensations of touch, pressure,
    temperature, and pain.
  • Kinesthetic sense - sense of the location of body
    parts in relation to the ground and each other.

Menu
31
Somesthetic Senses
LO 3.7 Touch, pain, motion and balance
  • 3. Vestibular senses - the sensations of
    movement, balance
  • Sensory conflict theory in which the information
    from the eyes conflicts with the information from
    the vestibular senses resulting in dizziness.

Menu
32
Perception and Constancies
LO 3.8 Perception and perceptual constancies
  • Perception - the method by which the sensations
    experienced at any given moment are interpreted
    and organized in some meaningful fashion.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vL3AgO6H0H98

Menu
33
Constancy
  • Size constancy - the tendency to interpret an
    object as always being the same actual size,
    regardless of its distance.

34
Constancy
  • Shape constancy - the tendency to interpret the
    shape of an object as being constant, even when
    its shape changes on the retina.

35
Constancy
  • Brightness constancy the tendency to perceive
    the apparent brightness of an object as the same
    even when the light conditions change.

36
Gestalt Principles
LO 3.9 Gestalt principles of perception
  • Figureground - the tendency to perceive objects
    as existing on a background.

Menu
37
Gestalt Principals
  • Reversible figures - visual illusions in which
    the figure and ground can be reversed.

38
Gestalt Principals
39
Gestalt Principles
LO 3.9 Gestalt principles of perception
Similarity
Proximity
Continuity
Closure
Menu
40
Development of Perception
LO 3.10 Perceiving the world in three dimensions
  • Depth perception - the ability to perceive the
    world in three dimensions

Menu
41
Monocular Cues
LO 3.10 Perceiving the world in three dimensions
  • Monocular cues (pictorial depth cues) cues for
    perceiving depth based on one eye only.

Menu
42
Monocular cues
LO 3.10 Perceiving the world in three dimensions
Linear Perspective
Texture gradient
Relative size
Areal perspective
43
Binocular Cues
  • Binocular cues - cues for perceiving depth based
    on both eyes.
  • Convergence - the rotation of the two eyes to
    focus on a single object, resulting in greater
    convergence for closer objects and lesser
    convergence if objects are distant.

Focal point
Left
Right
Far
Near
44
Binocular Cues
  • Binocular disparity - the difference in images
    between the two eyes, which is greater for
    objects that are close and smaller for distant
    objects.

45
Perceptual Illusions
LO 3.11 Visual illusions
Müller-Lyer illusion
46
Perceptual Illusions
LO 3.11 Visual illusions
Moon Illusion
47
Perceptual Illusions
LO 3.11 Visual illusions and other factors
influencing perception
  • Illusions of Motion
  • Stroboscopic motion - seen in motion pictures, in
    which a rapid series of still pictures will
    appear to be in motion.

48
Factors that Influence Perception
LO 3.11 Visual illusions and other factors
influencing perception
  • Perceptual expectancy- the tendency to perceive
    things a certain way because previous experiences
    or expectations influence those perceptions.
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