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Schiffman Ch. 2

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Optical Illusions and Visual Phenomena including wagon wheel. Motion aftereffects ... Optical Illusions & Visual Phenomena. The ear: functional anatomy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Schiffman Ch. 2


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Eye Disorders
  • Corneashape (nearsighted, farsighted,
    astigmatism), transparency loss
  • Lenscataracts
  • Pressureglaucoma
  • Retinaretinal detachment, macular degeneration,
    diabetic problems, albinism
  • Optic nervemyelin loss
  • CNSbrain injuries

3
Eye Disorders
  • Muscle controlnystagmus, strabismus, amblyopia

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Afterimages
  • Negative afterimagesdue to rebound effects
    after adaptation
  • Color Aftereffect

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Theories of color perception
  • Trichromatic (Young-Helmholtz)
  • Evidenceshine white light on cones get 3
    absorption curves

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Theories of color perception
  • Opponent process (Hering)cells respond in
    opposite ways for red-green, yellow-blue,
    black-white
  • Negative afterimages
  • Combination 3 types of cones linked to neural
    opponent process cells (in retina, thalamus,
    visual cortex)

11
Defective color vision
  • Usually due to deficiency of cone pigment
  • If lack red pigment (one that would respond to
    red) it affects green also, as that input to
    cells missing

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Figure-Ground
  • Figurestands out, smaller, seen as solid object
  • Groundrecedes, larger than object, encloses
    figure
  • Ambiguous figure-ground, as in Escher artworks

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Impossible trident explanation
  • Figure is impossible in 3-D, and cant be
    visually resolved in 2-D (drawing) because of
    shifting of elements from figure to ground
  • See Impossible Trident for longer explanation

19
Gestalt laws of perception
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proximity
  • See rows or columns?

21
Common fate
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Similarity proximity
  • Visual Demonstrations
  • Above link may enable demos of other Gestalt laws
    also

23
Subjective Contours
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Optic flow
  • optic flow
  • Im moving forward, or something is moving toward
    me
  • Symmetrical expansionIm going straight ahead or
    somethings coming straight at me
  • Asymmetrical expansionIm not going straight
    ahead or it will miss me

30
Biological motion
  • BMLwalker
  • Can tell male vs. female based on motion of
    point-light displays, biological vs. random, can
    recognize animals
  • Biological Motion
  • BioMotionLab Projects

31
Apparent movement
  • Illusory movement of stationary stimuli
  • Stroboscopic movementas in movies need to
    exceed critical flicker frequency for smooth
    movement
  • Phi phenomenon Phi Phenomenon (Apparent
    Movement)
  • Optical Illusions and Visual Phenomena including
    wagon wheel

32
Motion aftereffects
  • Waterfall illusion
  • Waterfall Illusion (bars, not water)
  • Motion After-Effect

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Monocular cues
  • Interpositionpartial occlusion

34
Monocular cues
  • Interposition

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Monocular cues
  • Aerial perspective elevation

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Monocular cues
  • Shading and lighting

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Shadow and motion
  • Shadow Ball

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Monocular cues
  • Shading and shape

39
Monocular cues
  • Shading and light direction assumption

40
Monocular cues
  • Linear perspective

41
Monocular cues
  • Linear perspective

42
Monocular cues
  • Texture gradient

43
Monocular cues
  • Relative size

44
Monocular cues
  • Motion parallaxfixate on a point, move head
    items closer than fixation point move faster than
    ones farther away, and in opposite direction
  • Static demo to illustrate different directions
    and rate of motion Psyc/Biol 240 - Motion
    Parallax

45
Ames room illusion
  • Size constancy distorted by room that is
    different shape than it looks for more info, see
    Ames Room

46
Illusions of depth, distance, constancy
  • Moon illusion
  • Moon Illusion Demonstration Applet
  • Various theories still hotly debated. If you
    really want to wade into debate, look here The
    Moon Illusion

47
Size/distance illusions
  • Muller-Lyer illusion
  • Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Perspective theory one looks like receding
    edge other looks like edge coming toward you
    one that looks farther away must be longer
  • However blind people feel the illusion
    tactually! Maybe we just average in the
    extended lines

48
Size/distance illusions
  • Ponzo illusion
  • The Ponzo Illusion
  • Could be distance illusion
  • However could be that lines that approach
    borders look larger

49
Misc. illusions
  • http//www.ritsumei.ac.jp/akitaoka/index-e.html
  • Counter-Rotating Spirals Illusion
  • Amos Storkey - Visual Illusions
  • Optical Illusions Visual Phenomena

50
The ear functional anatomy
  • BBCi - Science - Human Body - Nervous System
    Layer
  • http//www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/animations/coch
    lea/cochleaWeb.mov

51
Lateralization
  • Left hemisphere sequential (bottom up),
    syntactical, phonetic, word meanings, analysis of
    musics meaning
  • Right hemisphere holistic, integrative (top
    down), sight words, inferences, knowledge base,
    speed reading, overall sound of music
  • Note even chimps have some lateralization

52
Echolocation
  • Similar to sonar, ultrasound
  • Studies of blind individualsif get rid of
    auditory cues, cant navigate around objects in a
    room also, put microphone on another person, and
    let blind person listen to what microphone picks
    up as person walks aroundalmost as good as if
    blind person were walking
  • Stevie Wonder coin counting

53
Music
  • Octavesfrequencies are double
  • Notes octave apart sound more similar than any
    two in between
  • Perfect pitch
  • Amusiaprofound lack of musical perception cant
    recognize tones or reproduce them
  • Musical agnosiainability to recognize
    music/melodies

54
Perceiving music
  • Gestalt principles notes go together that are
    in proximity, similar in pitch, have common fate
    (go up or down together) also closure figure
    ground
  • Constancyfor anyone without perfect pitch, can
    sing song without knowing what key you are
    inrelationship of notes is what is constant, not
    absolute pitches

55
Speech
  • Do we have linguistic (e.g., phoneme) feature
    detectors? Study listen to repeated sound (d
    d d d d) for 2 min., then hear ambiguous sound
    (halfway between d and t), tend to hears sound
    other than one have been listening to (t) like a
    speech-based negative afterimage

56
Brain speech
  • Wernickes area speech reception
  • Brocas area expressive speech
  • Broca
  • Neuroscience for Kids - Language
  • Very specific deficits can occur loss of
    ability to know word meaning for certain words,
    but only when used as a verb, not same word as a
    noun loss of naming ability for fruits
    vegetables

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Vestibular apparatus
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Semicircular canals
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Semicircular canals
  • 3 canals represent X, Y, Z axes, so any motion
    can be represented as a combination of motions in
    these 3 directions
  • Responds mainly to acceleration
  • Motion aftereffect spinning around, stop, world
    spins opposite direction

61
Disorders
  • Menieres disease caused by high fluid pressure
    in labyrinth symptoms include dizziness, nausea,
    hearing problems
  • Motion sickness mismatch between visual input
    and signals from vestibular apparatus one theory
    about adaptive value of nauseasimulates visual
    input when poisoned

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Sensory deficits
  • Braillehigh sensitivity of fingers helps note
    word superiority effectletters in words
    recognized faster than individual letters (top
    down processing)
  • Tadoma method for people who are blind and
    deafhand touches mouth and face to pick up
    vibrations
  • Touching audio speaker to feel vibrations

66
Tactile vision
  • Tactual-visual substitution systemchair with
    vibrating pins note trade-off between large area
    (back) but also large 2 point touch thresholds
  • Fingers tongue might work better

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seeing tongue
  • Article about seeing tongue is here
  • The Seeing Tongue Science News Online, Sept. 1,
    2001
  • (may summarize for extra credit)
  • With experience, can recognize some objects, some
    depth cues
  • Works best if blind person controls camera
    movement cues important

69
Tickling
  • Unpredictability necessary cant tickle self
    effectively
  • fMRImore activation of somatosensory cortex when
    tickled by device operated by someone else than
    when operated by self

70
Temperature
  • Cold receptorsclose to surface hot
    receptorsdeeper
  • Why do different objects at same temperature feel
    like different temperatures? (e.g., wood
    metal)
  • Thermal conductivityhow fast does the object
    conduct heat away from skin
  • Getting burneddepends partly on heat content
    thermal conductivity

71
Thermal adaptation
  • Contrast effectsput one hand in cold water
    other in hot water for few minutes when then put
    both hands in medium temperature water, get
    different sensations

72
Pain
  • Adaptivenessexample in text about woman without
    pain sense (chronic pain insensitivity)
  • Different types of painsharp, highly localized
    dull, diffuse
  • Referred pain

73
Pain
  • Thresholddepends on many factors psychological
    factors (experience with specific pain,
    expectations (e.g., fear), self distraction,
    genetic differences, presence of other
    stimulation (e.g., acupuncture or acupressure)

74
Gate control theory of pain
  • Large fibersfast, acute
  • Small fibersslow ache, dull
  • Can close gate for small fibers by stimulating
    large fibers (e.g., rubbing, acupuncture,
    acupressure, electrical stimulation, etc.)
  • Emotional arousal also seems to shut off
    perception of pain

75
Acupuncture
  • Meridians based on Chinese acupuncture not
    logical locations, based on what is now known
    about nervous system modern acupuncture is more
    logical

76
Endorphins
  • Naturally occurring morphine-like chemicals in
    brain
  • Increase in response to pain

77
Taste
  • Transductionchemoreceptors taste cells located
    in taste buds
  • Primary tastessweet, sour, salt, bitter,
    (maybe) umami (savory, meaty, MSG)
  • NOT distributed in specific parts of tongue, as
    used to be thought

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Taste cells
  • Each type responds best to best stimulus, but
    all respond some to all stimuli
  • labeled linebest stimulus connected by
    specific pathway to specific part of brain, which
    indicates which cells were stimulated

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Cross-fiber patterning
  • Taste is due to pattern of receptor activation
  • Taste generalizationchemically similar stimuli
    cause similar pattern of responding

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Genetics
  • Thresholds for some stimuli (e.g., vanillin, PTC)
    are bimodalsome can taste easily (tasters),
    others not at all (nontasters)genetic basis
  • Supertasters25 of tastersperceive some bitter
    substances much more strongly than do regular
    tasters may be due to more taste cells
  • More taste cells linked to obesity

83
Adaptation
  • Aftereffectsadaptation-produced potentiation
  • Exposure to taste, then neutral (e.g., water)
    neutral then has a taste

84
Sugar substitutes
  • Two ways to have no or few calories
  • Body cant process
  • So sweet dont need much
  • Some studies show that sugar substitutes do not
    decrease our sugar intake (we find ways to get
    sugar in our diet by eating other things with
    sugar)

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Specific taste preferences
  • Selective deprivation can increase preference for
    that taste (e.g., rats salt)
  • Assumption is that if body needs something, we
    will crave it and find it more pleasant tasted
    than usual
  • Prenatalwhat mother eats and drinks can affect
    babys food preferences some

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Taste preferences
  • Cultural factorssensitive period for first two
    years foods infant exposed to will be eaten
    readily throughout life otherwise, takes more
    effort to learn to like or tolerate
  • Evolutionary logic of learned preferencesfrom
    available foods in environment, need to learn
    from adults which to eat which to avoid

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Conditioned taste aversion
  • Garcia Effectone trial taste aversion to
    something that made you sick
  • Only exceptions are among animals that are food
    specialists (e.g., vampire bats), who do not face
    the omnivores dilemma

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Odor quality
  • Hennings smell prism
  • http//www.aug.edu/psychology/faculty/SMELLANDTAST
    E.ppt

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Odor theory
  • Stereochemicalshape of molecule but, more
    recent evidence does not support
  • There is no accepted theory for how odors are
    classified

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Olfactory disorders
  • Anosmiacant smell
  • Hyposmiadecreased smell
  • Hyperosmiaincreased smell
  • Dysosmiadistortion in smell
  • Phantosmiaolfactory hallucinations
  • Possible causes drugs, chemotherapy, injury,
    disease, genetics

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coding
  • Adaptation rebound occur
  • Cross-adaptation (similar odors) occurs
  • Mixturesone odor can mask another

92
Smell preferences
  • Evolutionary basisattracted to smells associated
    with things that are good for us, such as ripe
    fruits disgusted by things that are bad for us,
    such as decay, body wastes ( skunky beer?)
  • Concentration matters
  • Prefer familiar odors, including own odor

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Odor memory
  • Stronger memory for odor than for other senses
  • Strong cue for autobiographical memories
  • State-dependent memoryodor affects

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Other psychological effects
  • Aromatherapyhelps people relax, but dont expect
    to cure psychological disorders this way
  • Pheromonesmany have been identified in animals,
    but research with humans still controversial
  • But sweaty T-shirt studyfemales prefer smell
    of symmetrical males

95
Other psychological effects
  • Male smell also tends to relax females (remember
    that concentration matters)
  • McClintock effectsynchronicity of menstrual
    cycles among women living together appears to be
    odor mediated

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Common chemical sense
  • Chemical irritants on mucosal surfaces stimulate
    a type of pain receptor causes reflexive
    behaviors to get rid of irritant (e.g., sneezing,
    coughing)
  • Preferences for irritating chemicals, such as hot
    pepperscant get animals to learn such
    preferences may be adaptive in some locations
    (kills bacteria, aids digestion)
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