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Sensation and Perception Liudexiang
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Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Dec 30, 2015

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Mark Pace

Sensation and Perception Liudexiang. Brief Contents. Sensation Perception. The nature of sensation. Sensation: the basic experience of stimulating the body ’ s sense. Absolute threshold: the least amount of energy that can be detected as a stimulation 50 percent of the time. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Sensation and Perception

Liudexiang

Page 2: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Brief Contents

• Sensation

• Perception

Page 3: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

The nature of sensation

• Sensation: the basic experience of stimulating the body’s sense.

• Absolute threshold: the least amount of energy that can be detected as a stimulation 50 percent of the time.

Page 4: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Absolute threshold

• Hearing: the tick of a watch from 6 meters in very quiet conditions

• Vision: a candle flame seen from 50 kilometers on a clear, dark night

• Taste: 1 gram of table salt in 500 liters of water• Smell: one drop of perfume diffused throughout a

three-room apartment• Touch: the wing of a bee falling on the check from a

height of 1centimeter

Page 5: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

The nature of sensation

• Adaptation: an adjustment of the senses to the level of stimulation they are received.

• Difference threshold or just-noticeable difference (jnd): the smallest change in stimulation that can be detected 50 percent of the time.

• Weber’ law: the principle that the jnd for any given sense is a constant fraction or proportion of the stimulation being judged.

Page 6: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception

• Perception: the brain’s interpretation of sensory information so as to give it meaning.

Page 7: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception:An optical illusion

Page 8: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception:An optical illusion

Page 9: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception:An optical illusion

Page 10: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perceptual organization: Random dots or something more?

Page 11: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

The reversible figure and ground

Page 12: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

The reversible figure and ground

Page 13: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

The reversible figure and ground

Page 14: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Figure-ground relationship

Page 15: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Some principles of perceptual organization • Proximity

• Similarity

• Closure

• Continuity

Page 16: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Proximity

Page 17: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Proximity

Page 18: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Similarity

Page 19: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Closure

Page 20: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Continuity

Page 21: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perceptual constancy

• Perceptual constancy refers to the tendency to perceive objects as relatively stable and unchanging despite changing sensory information.

Page 22: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perceptual constancy

• Size constancy

• Shape constancy

• Color constancy

• Bright constancy

Page 23: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Size constancy

• The perception of an object as the same size regardless of the distance from it is viewed.

Page 24: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Shape constancy

• A tendency to see an object as the same shape no matter what angle it is viewed from.

Page 25: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Shape constancy

Page 26: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Color constancy

• An inclination to perceive familiar objects as retaining their color despite changes in sensory information.

Page 27: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Brightness constancy

• The perception of brightness as the same, even though the amount of light reaching the retina changes.

Page 28: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception of distance and depthsuperposition:

Page 29: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception of distance and depthelevation as a visual cue:

Page 30: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Perception of distance and depthshadowing:

Page 31: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Visual illusion:reversible figure

Page 32: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Visual illusion:misleading depth cues

Page 33: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Visual illusion:misleading depth cues

Page 34: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

Visual illusion:

Page 35: Sensation and Perception Liudexiang

The end