The Senses - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Senses

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The Senses Chapter Five – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Senses


1
The Senses
  • Chapter Five

2
The Senses
  • Vision
  • Hearing
  • Taste
  • Smell
  • Touch
  • Skin senses
  • Vestibular
  • Kinesthetic
  • Each sense organ receives some sort of external
    stimulus such as light, sound waves, or pressure
  • Then, it changes the sensation into a
    chemical-electrical message transmitted by the
    nervous system

3
II. Vision
4
The Stroop Effect
5
A. The Eye
  • 1. Most studied of all senses
  • 2. Pupil- the opening in the iris that regulates
    the amount of light entering the eye
  • a. Where the light enters the eye
  • 3. Lens- a flexible, elastic, transparent
    structure in the eye that changes its shape to
    focus light on the retina

6
A. The Eye (cont.)
  • 4. Retina- the innermost coating of the back of
    the eye, containing the light-sensitive receptor
    cells
  • a. Rods cones are responsible for changing
    light energy into neuronal impulses
  • 5. Optic nerve- the nerve that carries impulses
    from the retina to the occipital lobe of the brain

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B. Cones and Rods
  • 1. Cones require more light than rods before they
    begin to respond
  • a. Work best in daylight
  • b. Similar to color film
  • 2. Rods can work in much lower light
  • a. Basis for night vision
  • b. Similar to sensitive black and white film

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C. Light
  • Is a form of electromagnetic radiation
  • 2. Other forms of electromagnetic radiation
    include
  • a. Radio waves
  • b. Microwaves
  • c. Infrared radiation
  • d. Ultraviolet rays
  • e. X-rays
  • f. Gamma rays

13
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
14
C. Light (cont.)
  • 3. Visible light only makes up a small portion of
    the electromagnetic spectrum
  • 4. Passing sunlight through a spectrum breaks the
    light into a rainbow of colors, each color having
    a different wavelength
  • a. Objects color depends on the light that
    reaches our eyes
  • b. Example- A pea looks green because it reflects
    green light and absorbs other colors

15
D. Process of Vision
  • Light energy stimulates the eye
  • Light rays enter the eye through the cornea
  • Then enter the pupil
  • Light then passes through the pupil to the lens,
    which changes its shape to focus or reflect the
    light rays onto the retina
  • As light rays hit the receptors, the process of
    conversion (energy is converted into a neural
    impulse) begins

16
D. Process of Vision
  • 3. When converted, the info is sent to the brain
    for further processing interpretation to the
    optic nerve
  • 4. The ultimate processing of visual information
    occurs in the visual cortex of the brain
  • Specialized cells process visual information
    including feature detectors cells activated by
    info such as slanted lines, specific shapes,
    movement, etc.

17
E. Color Vision
  • Young-Helmholtz (Trichromatic) theory
    (functioning of cones)
  • 3 types of cones exist in the eye yellow/red,
    blue/violet, green
  • Explains colorblindness
  • 2. Opponent-process theory (functioning of cells
    that process info from receptors)
  • 3 types of cones red/green, blue/yellow,
    black/white
  • Explains afterimages (individual looks at a
    stimulus for a period of time, then shifts gaze
    away from stimulus, only to see an afterimage of
    that stimulus in a different color)

18
Color Deficiency True or False?
  • 1. If a persons cones dont function correctly,
    the person is color-deficient
  • 2. Fewer people have trouble between red and
    green than yellow and blue
  • 3. A few can only see the world in blacks,
    whites, and shades of gray
  • 4. 8 of American men and 1 of American women
    are color blind/color deficient

19
Color Blindness Test
  • This figure tests for green colorblindness.
  • They might see part of the number.
  • They might not see the number at all.

20
Afterimages Test
21
F. Binocular Fusion
  • 1. Our visual system receives two images because
    we have two eyes
  • 2. Instead of seeing double, we see a combination
    of the two images
  • Large retinal disparity means object is nearby
  • b. Small retinal disparity means object is distant

22
Retinal Disparity
  • 1. Each eye projects a slightly different image
    on the retina
  • 2. Example- Bring an object such as an eraser
    close to your eyes. Without moving it, look at
    the eraser first with one eye and then with the
    other. You will see a difference in the two
    images because of the different viewpoint each
    eye has.

23
Vision in the Brain
24
G. Nearsightedness and Farsightedness
  • 1. Perfectly shaped eyeball means you have nearly
    perfect vision
  • 2. Long eyeball usually means you are nearsighted
  • a. You can see objects close to you, but objects
    in the distance are blurry
  • 3. Short eyeball usually means you are farsighted
  • a. You can see distant objects clear, but
    up-close objects are blurry

25
Problems with Vision
  • Here the eyeball is shaped like a football.
  • The image is projected in front of the retina.
  • If you pull the object closer to you, you can see
    it clearly.
  • Here the eyeball is shaped like an egg on its
    side.
  • The image is projected behind the retina.
  • If you pull the image farther away from you, you
    can see it clearly.

26
Important Figures in Vision Research
  • In one experiment, done in 1959, Hubel Wiesel
  • inserted a microelectrode into the primary visual
  • cortex of an anesthetized cat. They then
    projected
  • patterns of light and dark on a screen in front
    of
  • the cat. They found that some neurons fired
    rapidly
  • when presented with lines at one angle, while
  • others responded best to another angle. These
  • studies showed how the visual system constructs
  • complex representations of visual information
    from
  • simple stimulus features.

27
Lasik Surgery
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  • More than one million patients undergo the LASIC
  • procedure in the United States each year. The
    U.S. Food
  • and Drug Administration (FDA) reports that LASIK
    eye
  • surgery complications occur in 1 to 5 percent of
    cases.
  • According to the FDAs LASIC surgery statistics
  • Glare and sensitivity to light affect 1.7 percent
    of LASIC patients.
  • Visual fluctuations occur in 2.6 percent of LASIK
    patients.
  • Halos around light sources are experienced by 3.5
    percent of patients.
  • About 3 percent of patients report vision worse
    than before LASIC.
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