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Basic principles of sensory processing Chapter 8
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Page 1: Basic principles of sensory processing Chapter 8.

Basic principles of sensory processing

Chapter 8

Page 2: Basic principles of sensory processing Chapter 8.

The basic problem

• Imagine that you are trying to convey sensory information someone who is locked in a room with no access to the external world.

• All you can do is knock on the walls.

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1. The senses convey specific information about some source of

physical energy

•Muller’s specific nerve energies•we can’t see thunder or hear lightning

•Each sensory modality has a ‘labelled line’•Each sensory modality has specialized receptors for transduction

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An example of transduction - The Pacinian corpuscle

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2. Each sensory modality responds to a range of stimuli

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3. Each sensory modality has evolved to fit an animal’s needs

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Pit vipers and thermoreception

Burmese python

Can sense temperature changes of as little as 0.002 C

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Insect eyes and UV

Many flowersHave distinctive UV signatures

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4. Each sensory modality has a set of codes

• Intensity coding

• Location coding

• Coding of special object properties (colour, pitch)

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Coding for intensity

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Coding for locationTopography…. …albeit distorted

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\Coding for quality

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5. Submodalities have separate pathways

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Submodality coding is universal

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6. Sensory systems are interested in change

Adaptation -temporal change Mach bands - spatial change

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Sensory systems provide caricatures

• A vast number of illusions demonstrate that our senses do not convey an exact replica of the external world but instead help us to construct a world that ‘makes sense’ (i.e. allows us to behave adaptively).