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Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception
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Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception. Table of Contents Sensation and Perception: The Distinction Sensation : stimulation of sense organs Perception: selection,

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception. Table of Contents Sensation and Perception: The Distinction Sensation : stimulation of sense organs Perception: selection,

Chapter 4

Sensation and Perception

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Sensation and Perception: The Distinction

Sensation : stimulation of sense organs Perception: selection, organization, and

interpretation of sensory input Psychophysics = the study of how physical stimuli

are translated into psychological experience

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Psychophysics: Basic Concepts

Sensation begins with a detectable stimulus Transduction – the conversion of external

physical stimuli to neural impulses the brain can understand.

Fechner: the concept of the threshold– Absolute threshold: detected 50% of the time.– Just noticeable difference (JND): smallest difference

detectable• Weber’s law: size of JND proportional to size of initial stimulus

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Psychophysics: Concepts and Issues

Psychophysical Scaling: Fechner’s Law - larger and larger increases in stimulus intensity are required to produce JNDs in the magnitude of sensation.

Signal-Detection Theory: Sensory processes + decision processes

Subliminal Perception: Existence vs. practical effects

Sensory Adaptation: Decline in sensitivity

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Vision: The Stimulus

Light = electromagnetic radiation – Amplitude: perception of brightness– Wavelength: perception of color– purity: mix of wavelengths

• perception of saturation, or richness of colors.

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The Eye: Converting Light into Neural Impulses

The eye: housing and channeling Components:

– Cornea: where light enters the eye – Lens: focuses the light rays on the retina– Iris: colored ring of muscle, constricts or dilates via amount

of light– Pupil: regulates amount of light

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Figure 4.7 The human eye

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The Retina: An Extension of the CNS

Retina: absorbs light, processes images, and sends information to the brain

Optic disk: where the optic nerve leaves the eye/ blind spot

Receptor cells:– Rods: black and white/ low light vision– Cones: color and daylight vision

• Adaptation: becoming more or less sensitive to light as needed

Information processing:– Receptive fields -the collection of rod and cone receptors

that funnel signals to a particular visual cell in the retina.– Lateral antagonism (contrast) - occurs when neural

activity in a cell opposes activity in surrounding cells

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The Retina and the Brain: Visual Information Processing

Light -> rods and cones -> neural signals -> bipolar cells -> ganglion cells -> optic nerve -> optic chiasm -> opposite half brain ->

Main pathway: lateral geniculate nucleus (thalamus) -> primary visual cortex (occipital lobe)– magnocellular: where is it (ex. brightness)– parvocellular: what is it (ex.color)

Second pathway: superior colliculus ->thalamus -> primary visual cortex (motion)

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Hubel and Wiesel: Feature Detectors and the Nobel Prize

Early 1960’s: Hubel and Wiesel– Microelectrode recording of axons in primary visual cortex

of animals– Discovered feature detectors: neurons that respond

selectively to lines, edges, etc.– Groundbreaking research: Nobel Prize in 1981

Later research: cells specific to faces in the temporal lobes of monkeys and humans

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Visual Information Processing Trichromatic (three color) Theory

Young and Helmholtz three different retinal color receptors

red green blue

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Theories of Color Vision

Trichromatic theory - Young and Helmholtz– Receptors for red, green, blue – color mixing – F 4.21

Opponent Process theory – Hering– 3 pairs of antagonistic colors – negative afterimages– red/green, blue/yellow, black/white

Current perspective: both theories necessary Color vision defects Color vision defects: simulations

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Perception: Perceiving Forms, Patterns, and Objects

Reversible figures – F 4.23, F 4.31 Perceptual sets – readiness to perceive a stimulus

in a particular way – ambiguous stimuli – F 4.24 – effects of motivational factors

Inattentional blindness/change blindness – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkn3wRyb9Bk&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=38XO7ac9eSs

Feature detection theory - bottom-up processing. Form perception - top-down processing Subjective contours Gestalt psychologists: the whole is more than the

sum of its parts– Reversible figures and perceptual sets demonstrate that the

same visual stimulus can result in very different perceptions

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Principles of Perception

Gestalt principles of form perception:– figure-ground, proximity, similarity, continuity, closure, and

simplicity

Recent research:– Distal (stimuli outside the body) vs. proximal (stimulus

energies impinging on sensory receptors) stimuli. – Perceptual hypotheses

• Context

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Depth and Distance Perception

Binocular cues – clues from both eyes together – retinal disparity – convergence

Monocular cues – clues from a single eye – motion parallax – accommodation – pictorial depth cues

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Stability in the Perceptual World: Perceptual Constancies

Perceptual constancies – stable perceptions amid changing stimuli – Size– Shape– Brightness– Hue– Location in space

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Random Dot stereograms

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Emphasis on linear perspective during the Western Renaissance

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Optical Illusions: The Power of Misleading Cues

Optical Illusions - discrepancy between visual appearance and physical reality

Famous optical illusions: Muller-Lyer Illusion, Ponzo Illusion, Poggendorf Illusion, Upside-Down T Illusion, Zollner Illusion, the Ames Room, and Impossible Figures

Cultural differences: Perceptual hypotheses at work http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/ - website with visual

illusions and other visual effects

Art and Illusion – pages 175 - 179

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Hearing: The Auditory System

Stimulus = sound waves (vibrations of molecules traveling in air)– Amplitude (loudness)– Wavelength (pitch)– Purity (timbre)

Wavelength described in terms of frequency: measured in cycles per second (Hz)– Frequency increase = pitch increase

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The Ear: Three Divisions

External ear (pinna): collects sound. Middle ear: the ossicles (hammer, anvil, stirrup) Inner ear: the cochlea

– a fluid-filled, coiled tunnel – contains the hair cells, the auditory receptors– lined up on the basilar membrane

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Figure 4.49 The human ear

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Table of ContentsFigure 4.50 The basilar membrane

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The Auditory Pathway

Sound waves vibrate bones of the middle ear Stirrup hits against the oval window of cochlea Sets the fluid inside in motion Hair cells are stimulated with the movement of the

basilar membrane Physical stimulation converted into neural impulses Sent through the thalamus to the auditory cortex

(temporal lobes)

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Theories of Hearing: Place or Frequency?

Hermann von Helmholtz (1863) – Place theory

Other researchers (Rutherford, 1886)– Frequency theory

Georg von Bekesy (1947) – Traveling wave theory - the whole basilar membrane does

move, but the waves peak at particular places, depending on frequency.

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Auditory Localization: Where Did that Sound Come From?

Two cues critical: Intensity (loudness) Timing of sounds arriving at each ear

– Head as “shadow” or partial sound barrier

Timing differences as small as 1/100,000 of a second

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The Chemical Senses: Taste

Taste (gustation) Physical stimulus: soluble chemical substances

– Receptor cells found in taste buds

Pathway: taste buds -> neural impulse -> thalamus -> cortex – Four primary tastes: sweet, sour, bitter, and salty– Taste: learned and social processes

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The Chemical Senses: Smell

Smell (Olfaction) Physical stimuli: substances carried in the air

– dissolved in fluid, the mucus in the nose– Olfactory receptors = olfactory cilia

Pathway: Odor molecule, Nasal Passage, Nasal Cavity, Olfactory cilia (transduction)-> neural impulse ->olfactory nerve (axons pass through ethmoid bone)-> olfactory bulb (brain)->olfactory tract (inside bulb)->olfactory cortex in temporal lobe->limbic system– Does not go through thalamus– Retro-nasal Olfaction -> food in your mouth goes through the

back of your mouth to your nasal cavity where you smell it.

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Skin Senses: Touch

Physical stimuli = mechanical, thermal, and chemical energy impinging on the skin.

Pathway: Sensory receptors -> the spinal column -> brainstem -> cross to opposite side of brain -> thalamus -> somatosensory (parietal lobe)

Temperature: free nerve endings in the skin Pain receptors: also free nerve endings

– Two pain pathways: fast vs. slow

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Other Senses: Kinesthetic and Vestibular

Kinesthesis - knowing the position of the various parts of the body– Receptors in joints/muscles

Vestibular - equilibrium/balance– Semicircular canals

Synesthesia – “The man who tasted shapes” MIT Synesthesia Project