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Sensation

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Title: Sensation


1
Sensation Perception
  • Chapter 5

2
  • Sensation

3
Sensation
  • Refers to how our sense organs respond to and
    detect external stimulus energy (e.g. to lights,
    air vibrations, odors, and so on), and how those
    responses are transmitted to the brain.
  • In summary

4
Sensation
  • Is done by sensory receptors
  • Sensory organs code sensory stimulation so that
    the brain can understand them
  • This is called

5
SensationSensory Receptor Cells
6
Sensation
  • First, receptors receive
  • Then,
  • This is called
  • Next, connecting neurons in the sense organs

7
Sensation
  • Transduced messages carried by nerve impulses to
    the brain, are called
  • Two types of Sensory Coding
  • Quantitative
  • Qualitative

8
SensationQuantitative Sensory Coding
  • For quantitative factors,
  • Is characterized by the

9
SensationQualitative Sensory Coding
  • For factors such as
  • Mostly involves

10
Sensation Psychophysics
  • Definition examines our
  • Assesses such things as how much physical energy
    is required
  • To test this, researchers present very subtle
    changes in the stimuli and observe how people
    respond.

11
Sensation Psychophysics
  • Thresholds An important concept in Psychophysics
  • Sensory thresholds
  • Absolute threshold
  • Environment is seldom ideal.
  • Noise is an irrelevant and competing stimuli.
  • People have

12
Absolute Thresholdsfor Different Organ Systems
13
Sensation Psychophysics
  • Difference Thresholds
  • Webers Law

14
Sensation Psychophysics
  • Sensory adaptation

15
SensationThe Basic Sensory Processes
  • Gustation (Taste)
  • Smell
  • Touch
  • Hearing
  • Vision

16
SensationGustation
  • Or sense of -----
  • Purpose To keep ------------- our digestive
    systems while ---------------.
  • The stimuli for taste

17
SensationGustation
  • Taste buds
  • Different people have ------------
  • Mostly in the ---------
  • Each bud has about
  • Short, hair-like structures at the tip of each
    taste bud

18
SensationSmell
  • Odorous particles in the nose and the nasal
    cavity ?
  • Activate
  • Send coded messages to the brain center for smell
    (called -----------)?
  • Smell signals are sent
  • First to the ----------------
  • Next to the -----------

19
SensationSmell
  • Powerful memories and feelings are evoked by
    olfactory stimuli
  • Pheromones

20
SensationTouch
  • The haptic sense
  • Sensors in the skin detect
  • Haptic receptors

21
SensationTouch
  • Receptors for pressure
  • Some are --------------- at the bases of hair
    follicles that respond to ------------
  • Some others are ---------------- in the skin that
    respond to
  • The integration of these various signals produces
    haptic experiences.

22
SensationTouch
  • Receptors for temperature
  • Receptors for -----
  • Receptors for --------
  • The integration of both signals ?

23
SensationTouch
  • Receptors for pain
  • The Purpose of pain
  • Nerve fibers conveying pain information are found
    in

24
SensationTouch
  • Receptors for pain
  • Two types of pain are related to two kinds of
    nerve fibers
  • Sharp, immediate pain is related to
  • Chronic, dull, steady pain is related to
  • Fast pain leads to
  • Slow pain
  • Gate-Control Theory of pain

25
SensationHearing
  • The stimulus for hearing The displacement of air
    molecules caused by changes in air pressure.
  • The ear detects Sound-Waves (i.e., patterns of
    changes in air pressure over time)
  • The amplitude of the wave determines its loudness
  • Higher amplitude is perceived as louder
  • The frequency of a sound wave determines its
    pitch
  • Higher frequencies perceived as higher in pitch
  • The frequency of sound is measured in vibrations
    per second, called hertz (Hz).

26
SensationHearing
  • Various regions of ear transduce sound waves into
    brain activity, producing meaningful sounds (see
    figs 5.5 and 5.6 in your textbook)
  • outer ear
  • Middle ear
  • Eardrum
  • Ossicles (hammer, anvil, and stirrup)
  • oval window cochlea
  • basilar membrane

27
SensationHearing
  • Temporal coding
  • A mechanism for encoding low-frequency auditory
    stimuli
  • Information is encoded by the frequency of firing
    of the hair cells
  • Place coding
  • A mechanism for encoding high-frequency auditory
    stimuli
  • Information is encoded by the location of the
    hair cells along the basilar membrane.

28
SensationVision
  • The eye detects light waves
  • The light gets focused on the retina (fig 5.7)
  • 120 million rods and 6 million cones are retinal
    receptor cells that transduce levels of
    illumination and color (fig 5.8)
  • 3 distinct types of cones S, M, L
  • Optic nerve consists of axons from ganglion cells
    projected from retina to primary visual cortex
    (fig. 5.10)

29
  • Perception

30
Perception
  • The brain translates/interprets the electrical
    impulses, caused by sensory stimuli, to various
    perceptual experiences
  • All sensory information (with the exception of
    olfaction) is relayed to the brain via thalamus
  • Then thalamus sends the information to primary
    sensory areas

31
Primary Sensory Areas
32
PerceptionHearing
  • Auditory neurons in thalamus extend their axons
    to the primary auditory cortex (A1)
  • Neurons in A1
  • Code the frequency (or pitch) of auditory stimuli
  • Are organized Tonotopicly, neurons at the
  • Rear end of A1 respond best to lower frequencies
    (e.g., the sound of a fog horn)
  • Front end respond best to higher frequencies
    (e.g., a train whistle)
  • Are surrounded by several secondary auditory
    areas in the temporal and parietal lobes

33
PerceptionTouch
  • Touch neurons in thalamus extend their axons to
    the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) in the
    partial lobe
  • Neurons in S1 (fig 4.9)
  • Are organized somatotopicly, neighboring body
    parts tend to be represented next to one another

34
PerceptionVision
  • up to half of the cerebral cortex may participate
    in visual perception
  • The primary visual cortex (V1) in the occipital
    lobe
  • The neuronal pathway from the retina to the
    occipital lobe preserves spatial relationships,
    so that adjacent areas of the retina correspond
    to adjacent areas in V1
  • This is called retinotopic organization
  • Early cortical processing does a roughly
    description of various image properties and their
    locations within the scene
  • But is still far from identification of the three
    dimensional structure of the visible world
  • Hierarchical processing of the details of the
    visual image is done in a number of stages, first
    stage includes extracting visual primitives
    (e.g. lines, angles, colors, curves, motion)

35
PerceptionVision
  • Some neurons in the primary visual cortex are
    specialized in responding to lines of a
    particular orientation
  • E.g. Some neurons fire more in reaction to a
    vertical line segment but fire less in reaction
    to a horizontal line segment
  • Some neurons in the primary visual cortex are
    specialized in detecting the ends of lines,
    corners, and colors, as well as more complex
    visual features.

36
PerceptionVision
  • Two parallel processing streams formed by visual
    areas other than V1 are
  • A lower ventral stream
  • Involving occipital and temporal lobe regions
  • Specialized for processing object perception and
    recognition (e.g., color shape)
  • Called what pathway
  • A higher dorsal stream
  • Involving occipital and parietal lobe regions
  • Specialized for processing spatial information
  • Called where pathway

37
PerceptionVision
  • Visual filling-in
  • Definition the early visual areas (e.g., V1)
    fill in the constant region information that was
    thrown out at the level of the ganglion cells
  • E.g. When the gap falls on your blind spot, your
    brain fills in the portion of the area that it
    assumes is missing because of the blind spot
  • Happens automatically
  • Is cognitively impenetrable Meaning that it
    can not be changed by your thoughts
  • Even though you know that there is a gap out
    there in the world, you cannot help but see a
    continuous line when the image of the gap falls
    on your blind spot
  • Shows that the perception has a constructive
    nature

38
Object Perception Requires Construction
  • Gestalt Principles of Perception
  • Perception is more than the result of
    accumulating sensory data
  • Proximity and Similarity (fig 5.19)
  • The Best forms (see figs 5.20, 5.21, 5.22,
    5.23)
  • Figure Ground

39
Size Perception Depends on Distance Perception
  • Ponzo Illusion (fig 5.37)
  • Moon Illusion (fig 5.38)

40
Perception Ponzo Illusion
A classic size illusion caused by misleading cues
of depth perception. The two horizontal lines
appear to be different sizes because of the law
of perspective that tells us that parallel
lines converge in the distance. In fact, the two
lines are the same length.
41
Perception Moon Illusion
The moon looks larger when it is near the horizon
than when it is overhead, due to various visual
cues.
42
Perceptual Constancies
  • Definition We correctly perceive objects as
    constant despite sensory data that could lead us
    to think otherwise
  • To perceive constancies, we need to understand
    the relationship between at least two factors.
  • Size constancy, by knowing how far away the
    object is from us
  • Shape constancy, by knowing from what angle were
    seeing the object
  • Color constancy, by comparing the wavelengths of
    light reflected from the object with those from
    its background.
  • Lightness constancy, by knowing how much light is
    being reflected from the object and from its
    background

43
Perceptual Constancies
  • Classical theory of Helmholz
  • Perceptual experience relies on unconscious
    inferences using automatic Gestalt grouping
    procedures and assumptions
  • Built-in-assumptions influence perception, and
    affect how visual illusions are beyond conscious
    control (fig 5.42)

44
Attention
  • Perception Management
  • The brain is constantly receiving input from an
    enormous number of sources.
  • The study of attention is the study of how the
    brain selects which sensory stimuli to discard
    and which to pass along to higher levels of
    processing.
  • Visual Attention Selective and Serial
  • Auditory Attention Selective Listening
  • The cocktail party phenomenon refers to how you
    can focus on a single conversation in the midst
    of a chaotic cocktail party, yet a particularly
    pertinent stimulus, such as hearing your name
    mentioned in another conversation, can capture
    your attention

45
Selective Attention
  • Filter theory we have a limited capacity for
    sensory information and thus screen incoming
    information, only letting in the most important.
    In this model, attention is like a gate that
    opens for important information and closes for
    information to be ignored
  • Early Selection theory we can choose which
    stimuli we will attend to even before we process
    their basic features. In visual processing we
    could choose to ignore features such as color or
    form and process only those features that we had
    decided would be important for the task at hand.
    Accordingly, attention effectively filters out
    certain features at an early stage so that they
    never get processed.

46
Selective Attention
  • Late Selection theory We take in sensory
    information, process it, and then select which
    aspects of the stimuli should be attended. The
    attention stage occurs when the perception enters
    our conscious awareness
  • Modern theories of attention suggest that
    selective attention can operate at multiple
    stages of perceptual processing. A variety of
    studies has shown that the processing of attended
    stimuli is enhanced relative to that of
    unattended stimuli, but that unattended stimuli
    are still processed. Some researchers suggest
    that unattended information is not gated
    completely but instead is simply reduced.
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