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SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

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Title: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION


1
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION
  • MCGONIGLE
  • INTRO TO PSYCHOLOGY

2
Example of Determining Factor
  • Sentry at wartime
  • Sentry at peacetime
  • Who will be more likely to sense danger?

3
Sensory Adaptation
  • Imagine yourself at a bonfire, marshmallow roast,
    what happens to the faces in the background after
    a while?
  • What animals see better in the night time as
    opposed to day? Why do you think this is true?

4
Absolute Threshold
  • Weakest amount of a stimulus that can be sensed.
  • Dogs can hear certain whistles that we can not
    hear.
  • Biological Psychological factors determine
    different thresholds.

5
Difference Threshold
  • The minimum amount of difference that can be
    detected between two stimuli is known as the
    difference threshold.
  • Dark blue/ Navy blue could you tell the
    difference? Stang baseball hats- maroon?

6
Signal Detection Theory
  • Method of distinguishing sensory stimuli that
    takes into account not only their strengths, but
  • Setting
  • Physical state
  • Mood
  • Attitudes

7
Eye
8
Sensory Adaptation
  • We become more sensitive to weak stimuli such as
    the faces around the fire.
  • We become less aware of the heat of the fire or
    the sound of the wood burning or the smell of the
    marshmallows.
  • Attleboro apartment near commuter rail

9
Threshold Receptors
  • Vision Rods and cones in the retina.
  • Hearing Hair cells of the inner ear.
  • Smell Receptor cells in the nose.
  • Taste Taste buds on the tongue.
  • Touch Nerve endings on the skin.

10
Light
  • Think of a rainbow/ prism
  • What colors are most brilliant to you?
  • Main colors of spectrum (Roy G Biv)
  • Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet.
  • Not visible - Infrared and ultraviolet.

11
Eye
  • Amount of light that enters the eye is determined
    by the size in the opening in the colored part of
    the eye. (pupil)
  • Pupil dilation discussion
  • Lens adjusts to the distance of objects by
    changing its thickness.
  • FST why do people squint? Eye glasses/ contac
    lens..

12
Human Eye (contd)
  • Retina sensitive surface in the eye that acts
    like film in a camera. Made up of neurons not
    film.
  • Photoreceptors once the light hits the
    photoreceptors, a nerve carries the visual input
    to the brain.
  • Blind spot Where optic nerve leaves the eye 4-3.

13
Eye ( last slide)
  • Rods and Cones Rods are sensitive only to the
    brightness of light.
  • Rods allow us to see in black and white
  • Cones allow us to see in color.

14
Visual Acuity
  • Sharpness of vision is called visual acuity.
  • Snellen Vision Chart 20/20
  • Nearsighted, Farsighted. (Myopia, Hyperopia)

15
Snellen Chart
  • T E
  • P V L

16
Snellen Chart
  • H C O E
  • H P D N L Z A

17
Snellen Chart
  • D V H T L U
  • E V O C U C
  • P C Y L H N

18
Snellen Last
  • P C Y L h D v
  • Dont squint!!!!!!

19
Color Circle
  • Each color has a complementary partner
  • Discussion of Traffic Lights
  • Why are school buses yellow??

20
Afterimage/ Color Blindness
  • Afterimage Of a color is its complementary
    color. ( USA Flag)
  • Color blind unable to distinguish color due to
    an absence of or malfunction in the cones.
  • Total Color blindness is very rare..
  • Socks Black socks / Navy blue hard for men.

21
Hearing
  • Pitch How high or low a sound is depends on its
    frequency or of cycles per second.
  • AI term used often..
  • More cycles per second, the higher the pitch.
  • Womens voices higher pitch than men, shorter
    vocal cords.

22
Loudness
  • Loudness determined by the height, or amplitude
    , of sound waves.
  • Higher the amplitude the louder the sound.
  • Loudness is measured in decibels. ( 0 watch
    ticking 20 away in a quiet room)

23
Ear
  • Shaped to capture sound waves, the outer ear is
    what we see.
  • Eardrum thin membrane that vibrates when sound
    hits it.
  • Transmits sound to the three bones in the ear. (
    hammer, anvil, and stirrup)

24
Cochlea
  • Latin for Snail ( Its shape) in the inner ear.
  • Contains fluids neurons that move in response
    to vibrations of the fluids.
  • Movement - Generates neural impulses that are
    transmitted to the brain.
  • Auditory nerve transmits this message.

25
Deafness
  • Conductive Deafness Occurs because of damage to
    the middle ear.
  • Sensorineural deafness Caused by damage to the
    inner ear. Neurons in cochlea are destroyed or
    damage to auditory nerve.
  • What occupations would experience sensorineural
    deafness?

26
Other Senses Smell Taste
  • Dogs incredible sense of smell..
  • Helen Keller ( 90)
  • Onion/ Apple w/out smell???
  • Odors are detected by neurons in each nostril.
  • Receptors send info to the brain via the
    olfactory nerve.

27
Taste
  • 5 Taste Buds
  • Sweetness, Sourness, Saltiness, Bitterness, Umami
  • Without a sense of smell, our sense of taste can
    be compromised..

28
Skin Senses
  • Some are more sensitive than others
  • P.91
  • Fingertips
  • Lips
  • Cheeks

29
Less sensitive to touch
  • Shoulders
  • Thighs
  • Calves

30
Temperature
  • 98.6
  • Neurons beneath the skin
  • Hot day- receptors for warmth fire
  • Cold day- receptors for cold fire
  • Adjustment cold water after a while
  • NE Patriot fan vs. Miami Dolphin fan !!!

31
Pain
  • Not all areas are equally sensitive to pain.
  • Pain point of contact 1st.
  • Pain - sent to the spinal cord 2nd.
  • Pain now enters the thalamus in the brain.
  • Pain ends in the cerebral cortex.

32
Gate Theory
  • Gate Limit
  • Only a certain amount of info can be processed at
    one time.
  • Rubbing the area can transmit sensations to the
    brain that compete w/ pain.
  • Western Movies Bite the bullet

33
Body Senses
  • Vestibular sense Tells you whether you are
    physically upright w/out using your eyes. (
    gymnasts) - role of ears!
  • Kinesthesis sense that informs people about the
    position and motion of their bodies.
    (kinesiology)

34
Perception
  • Closure Figure 4-10- Tendency to perceive a
    complete or whole figure even when there are gaps
    in what your senses tell you.
  • Figure-Ground Perception Vase vs. 2 faces. Is
    the perception of figures against a background

35
Perception ( Contd)
  • Proximity ( 6 lines)
  • Similarity ( xs os)
  • Continuity ( wavy lines)
  • Common fate ( people running together)

36
Stroboscopic Motion
  • Page 95- give illusion of motion (cat)
  • Illusion of motion produced by showing the
    rapid progression of images or objects that are
    not moving at all.
  • Little picture books- flipped to look like motion
    pictures.

37
Visual Illusions
  • Muller- Lyer illusions- which line is longer?
  • Ponzo illusion lines appear to be coming
    together.
  • Rule of size constancy. ( looking at people from
    a plane)

38
Quiz Thursday
  • Taste Buds
  • Roy G Biv
  • Rods Cones
  • Lens Retina
  • Absolute Threshold
  • Difference Threshold
  • Types of Deafness
  • Bones in the Ear
  • Decibel levels
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