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Sensation and Perception
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Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation? A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean? Any aspect of or change.

Dec 29, 2015

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Imogene Cannon
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Page 1: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Sensation and Perception

Page 2: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

What is Sensation?

A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?

Any aspect of or change in the environment to which an organism responds is called a stimulus.

Example: a light switch being turned on fills a room with light.

Page 3: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

What is Sensation?

A stimulus can be measured in a variety of ways including it’s size, duration, intensity, or wavelength.

A Sensation occurs anytime a stimulus activates one of your receptors.

The sense organs then detect any change in energy, such as light, heat, sound, and physical pressure.

Page 4: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

What is a Perception?

A sensation may be combined with other sensations and your past experience to yield a perception.

A perception is the organization of sensory information into meaningful experiences.

What are the relationships between sensation and perception?

Page 5: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Psychophysics

Psychophysics: The study of the relationships between sensory experiences and the physical stimuli that cause them!

Ok, so that explains how sensation and perception are related…but how are they different?

Page 6: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Fraser’s Spiral

Fraser’s spiral illustrates the difference between sensation and perception. Our perception of this figure is that of a spiral, but it is actually an illusion. If you want, trace a circle carefully…You will always come back to the beginning!

Page 7: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Absolute Threshold

In order to determine how we judge sensation and perception, we must first figure out the weakest amount of a stimuli that is required to produce a sensation. In other words, we must find the absolute threshold.

The Absolute Threshold is: the level of stimulus that produces a positive response of detection 50% of the time!

Page 8: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 9: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

The Absolute Thresholds for the “5” senses in humans are the following:

1. Vision: Seeing a candle flame 30 miles away on a clear night.

2. Hearing: Hearing a watch ticking 20 feet away.

3. Taste: Tasting 1 teaspoon of sugar dissolved into 2 gallons of water.

4. Smell: Smelling one drop of perfume in a 3 room house.

5. Touch: Feeling a bee’s wing falling a distance of one centimeter onto your cheek.

Page 10: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Sensory Adaptation

Psychologists have found that your senses are the most responsive to increases and decreases, and to new events rather than to ongoing, unchanging stimulation.

We are able to respond to the changes in our environment because our senses have the ability to adapt, or adjust themselves, to a constant level of stimulation.

Once your senses get used to a new level of a stimulation, they respond only to deviations from it!

Page 11: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Examples of Adaptation 1. Your eyes eventually adjust to a

darkened movie theatre. At first you see blackness, but eventually, you can see what is going on around you.

2. When you first jump into a pool that “feels cold” your body reacts to the stimulus. Eventually, your body adapts to the sensation and you become “comfortable.”

3. When you first walk into a sports locker room, the smell is almost nausiating. After a while, your senses adjust and you can hardly tell.

Page 12: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

What do you see…Or don’t you?

Page 13: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

The Stroop Effect

Try to name the colors as fast as you can. Not that hard right? How fast are you?

Page 14: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

The Stroop Effect- Now, try to name

the colors of the words you see here as fast as you can!

- Not so easy is it?

- How you like them apples?

- Why was it more difficult to name these colors?

Page 15: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Perception

Page 16: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Perception

How do you perceive yourself? Those around you? Cars on the road? Noises? Buildings?

We do not merely have sensory experiences, we perceive objects! The brain recieves information from the senses and organizes and interprets it into meaningful experiences – unconsciously!

This process is called perception!

Page 17: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

William Blake

"If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would

appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he

sees all things through narrow chinks of his cavern."

Page 18: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Perception

Through the process of perception, the brain is always trying to comprehend the confusion of stimuli that bombard the senses.

The brain makes sense of the world by creating whole structures out of bits and pieces of information in the environment!

This process is called Gestalt! Gestalt: The experience that comes from

organizing bits and pieces of information into meaningful wholes.

Page 19: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 20: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

We organize what we see based on 4 groupings

Page 21: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

We also try to make sense out of what we see by using Figure-Ground

Perception

The division of experience into figure and ground.

Figure-ground perception is the ability to discriminate properly between a figure and its background.

It is easy to distinguish between 3 dimensional objects, but what about 2 dimensional ones?

Page 22: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 23: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Let’s try this one!

Page 24: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

We also Infer our perceptions, this is called Perceptual

Inference Often we have perceptions that

are not based entirely on current sensory information.

For instance, when you hear barking as you approach your house, you assume its your dog – not a cat or a rhinoceros or even another dog!

When you are driving up a steep hill and cannot see the road over the hill, you assume that the road continues even though you cannot see it!

This Phenomenon is called Perceptual Inference: In other words, filling the gaps in what you actually know.

Page 25: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Subliminal Messages Subliminal messages are brief auditory or visual

messages that are presented below the absolute threshold.

They are presented below the “absolute threshold” so that there is less than a 50 percent chance they that they will be perceived.

Subliminal messages are not as common as you might think.

In fact, the vast majority of what you have probably heard is not true.

Page 26: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 27: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 28: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 29: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 30: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 31: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 32: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 33: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 34: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 35: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 36: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 37: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 38: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 39: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.
Page 40: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Backmasking

Page 41: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Perceptual Set

Half the class close your eyes and the other half look at this image

Perceptual set is a bias or readiness to perceive certain aspects of available sensory data and to ignore others

Page 42: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

A

Page 43: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Depth Perception

In order to create a sense of “depth perception,” people use many monocular depth cues to perceive distance and depth.

Monocular depth cues are cues that can be used with a single eye.

One of these very important cues is called motion parallax.

Motion Parallax: the apparent movement of stationary objects relative to one another that occurs when the observed changes position!

Motion Parallax Video

Page 44: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Cues for Monocular Perception

Relative Size Relative Motion (motion Parallax) Interposition Relative Height Texture Gradient Relative Clarity

Page 45: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

A Little bit of Depth Perception

http://www.scientificpsychic.com/graphics/

Page 46: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Illusions What are illusions? Illusions: perceptions that misrepresent

physical stimuli. Illusions can be very useful in teaching us

how our sensation and perceptual rules work.

Illusions are created when our perceptual keys such as size, space, and depth cues are changed!

Page 47: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

A very Strange Room!

Page 48: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Extrasensory Perception!

Extrasensory Perception or “ESP”:

An ability to gain information by some means other than the ordinary senses.

There are 4 different types of “ESP”:

1. Clairvoyance – is perceiving objects or information without sensory input.

2. Telepathy – involves the reading of someone else’s mind or transferring one’s own thoughts.

3. Psychokinesis – involves moving objects through a purely mental effort.

4. Precognition – is the ability to foretell future events.

ESP is a very highly contested topic! Why is this?

Try this ESP test!

Page 49: Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation?  A “sensation” occurs when something around you changes…So what does that mean?  Any aspect of or change.

Synesthesia

Synesthesia is a condition in which one sense (for example, hearing) is simultaneously perceived as if by one or more additional senses such as sight.

Get out a sheet of paper and write down the first color that comes to your mind after each number I say….