Top Banner
SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY
106
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

SENSATION & PERCEPTION

CHAPTERS 4 & 5AP PSYCHOLOGY

Page 2: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

SENSATION

Page 3: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

How do we take in information?

• A sense is a system that translates information from outside the nervous system into neural activity.

• Messages from senses are called sensations– For example, vision is the system through which

the eyes convert light into neural activity. This tells the brain something about the source of the light (brightness) or about the objects from which the light is reflected (round, red, etc).

Page 4: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Elements of a Sensory System

1. Energy (light, sound waves, etc) contains info about the world

2. Accessory Structures (lens, ear, etc) modify energy.3. Transduction- the process of converting incoming

energy into neural activity through sensory receptors4. Sensory nerves transfer the coded activity to the

Central Nervous System.5. Thalamus processes and relays the neural response

(except in smell).6. Cortex receives input and produces the sensation and

perception

Page 5: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.1: Elements of a Sensory System

Page 6: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

How does physical energy get converted into neural activity?

CODING - translation of the physical properties of a stimulus into a pattern of neural activity that specifically identifies those physical properties.

Doctrine of Specific Nerve Energies - stimulation of a particular sensory nerve provides codes for that one sense, no matter how the stimulation takes place

Temporal Code - involves changes in the timing of the neurons firing. Ex: A bright light will cause some neurons in the visual system to fire faster than a dim light.

Spatial Code - the location of the firing neurons provides information about the stimulus (tells us where the sensation is coming from).

Page 7: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

HEARING• Sound is a repetitive

fluctuation in the pressure of a medium, such as air.

• In a place like the moon, which has almost no atmospheric medium, sound cannot exist

• When you speak, your vocal cords vibrate, producing fluctuations in air pressure that spread as waves. A wave is a repetitive variation in pressure that spreads out in 3 dimensions.

Page 8: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Physical Characteristics of Sound

1. Amplitude- (intensity) difference in air pressure from the baseline to the peak of a wave.

2. Wavelength- the distance from one peak wave to the next.

3. Frequency- number of complete waves, or cycles, that pass by a given point in space every second. Described in a unit called hertz, (Hz). 1 cycle per second is 1 hertz

Page 9: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.2: Sound Waves and Waveforms

Page 10: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Psychological Dimensions of SoundWhat do we actually hear?

1. Loudness- determined by amplitude. Greater amplitude = Louder sounds

2. Pitch- how high or low a tone sounds. Determined by frequency.

– High frequency = High Pitch – Low Frequency = Low Pitch

3. Timbre- (pronounced “tamber”) is the quality of the sound

Page 11: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

The Ear• Auditory accessory

structures modify sound waves before information affects neural signals– Pinna – crumpled part of ear

that funnels sound through the ear canal

– Tympanic Membrane – eardrum – tightly stretched membrane in the middle ear where sound waves strike

– Vibrations of the tympanic membrane are transferred through 3 tiny bones - malleus (hammer), incus (anvil), stapes (stirrup)

Sound Waves 1

Page 12: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Auditory Transduction• After sound passes through the oval window, it

enters the inner ear or cochlea - this is where transduction occurs

• The basilar membrane forms the floor of this long tube

• Sound waves bend hairs of the organ of Corti – a group of cells which rest on the membrane

• Hair cells connect with fibers from the auditory nerve, a bundle of axons that goes into the brain

Figure 4.4: The Cochlea

Sound Waves 2

Page 13: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Auditory Pathways

• Auditory nerve brainstem thalamus• The information coded in the activity of

auditory nerve fibers is conveyed to the brain and processed further

• Information is relayed from the auditory nerve to an area of the cerebral cortex called the primary auditory cortex

• Various aspects of sound processed in different regions of auditory system.

• Certain parts of auditory cortex process certain types of sounds.

Page 14: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Auditory Transduction

Page 15: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

How we hear?

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSO765hyxrc&feature=related

Page 16: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Sensing Pitch

• Different people may experience the “same” sound as different pitches.

• Pitch-recognition abilities influenced by genetics.– Cultural factors are also partly responsible

for the way in which a pitch is sensed.

Page 17: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Locating Sounds

• Determined partly by the very slight difference in when sound arrives at each ear.

• The brain also uses information about the difference in sound intensity at each ear.

Page 18: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Coding Intensity and Frequency

• The more intense the sound, the more rapid the firing of a given neuron.

• Frequency appears to be coded in two ways: place theory and frequency-matching theory

Page 19: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Coding Frequency: Place Theory

• Sounds produce waves that move down the basilar membrane.– Where the wave peaks

depends on the frequency of the sound.

• Hair cells at a particular place on the membrane respond most to a particular frequency.

Page 20: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Coding Frequency: Frequency Matching Theory

• Firing rate of an auditory nerve matches a sound wave’s frequency.

• Sometimes called the “volley theory” of

frequency coding.

Page 21: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Vision• Light – electromagnetic radiation• Visible light has a wavelength from just under 400 nanometers to 750

nanometers • Light intensity –

– How much energy the light contains – Determines the brightness of light

• Light Wavelength – – The difference between peaks in light waves– Determines what color we see

Page 22: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.7: Spectrum of Electromagnetic Energy

Page 23: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

The spectrum of electromagnetic energy

Page 24: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Physical Properties of Light Waves

Short wavelength=high frequency(bluish colors, high-pitched sounds)

Long wavelength=low frequency(reddish colors, low-pitched sounds)

Great amplitude(bright colors, loud sounds)

Small amplitude(dull colors, soft sounds)

Page 25: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Accessory Structures of the Eye• Cornea – curved, transparent layer through which light rays enter

the eye• Pupil – opening in the eye through which light passes• Iris – colorful part of the eye which adjusts the amount of light

entering the eye• Lens – bends rays, focusing them on the retina• Retina – Surfaces at back of the eye onto which the lens focuses

light rays

Page 26: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.8: Major Structures of the Eye

Page 27: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Vision• Accommodation- the process by which the

eye’s lens changes shape to help focus near or far objects on the retina Acuity- the sharpness of vision Nearsightedness- condition in which nearby

objects are seen more clearly than distant objects because distant objects in front of retina

Farsightedness- condition in which faraway objects are seen more clearly than near objects because the image of near objects is focused behind retina

Page 28: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

How Light enters the eye

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15P8q35vNHw

Page 29: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Vision

Normal Vision Nearsighted Farsighted

Page 30: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Converting Light into Images

• Visual transduction is the conversion of light energy into neural activity.

• Conversion done by photoreceptors in the retina.

• Two main types of photoreceptors: Rods and cones.

Page 31: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Rods and Cones

Rods peripheral retina detect black, white

and gray twilight or low light

Cones near center of retina fine detail and color

vision daylight or well-lit

conditions

Page 32: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Interactions in the Retina

• Photoreceptor cells connect to bipolar cells and then to ganglion cells

• Axons of the ganglion cells form the optic nerve, which extends out of the eye and into the brain

• Each neuron of a sensory system has a receptive field – part of the retina and the region of the environment to which that cell responds

Page 33: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.11: Center-Surround Receptive Fields of Ganglion

Cells

Page 34: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.12: The Hermann Grid

The cell whose receptive field includes the space at the intersection has more whiteness shining on its inhibitory surround than the cell whose receptive field is just to the right of the intersection. The output of the

intersection cell will be lower than that of the one on the right, creating the impression of a shadow.

Page 35: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Visual Pathways• Axons from ganglion cells converge as a bundle of fibers called

the optic nerve and exit the eyeball at one spot• The exit point has no photoreceptors and is insensitive to light

creating a blind spot• About ½ the fibers of the optic nerve cross over to the opposite

side of the brain at the optic chiasm (part of the bottom surface of the brain)

Page 36: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Visual Pathways con’t• Axons from most of ganglion cells in

retina form synapses in the thalamus, in a specific region called the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)

• Neurons in the LGN relay the visual input to the primary visual cortex, located in the occipital lobes in the back of the brain

Page 37: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Pathways from the Eyes to the Visual Cortex

Page 38: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Visual Representations• Receptive fields of neurons are characterized

by parallel processing and hierarchical processing– Parallel Processing of visual properties: Brain conducts separate

kinds of analysis simultaneously on the same information.– The “what” system– The “where” system

– Hierarchical Processing of visual properties: • Individual cells in the visual cortex receive input from several

LGN neurons.• Cortical cells respond to specific features of objects in the

visual field – Feature detectors

Light Conversion

Page 39: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Seeing Color• Hue – color determined by the

dominant wavelength in the mixture of the light (excludes black, white, gray)

• Saturation – purity of a color

• Brightness – overall intensity of the wavelengths that make up light

Page 40: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Visual Information Processing

Trichromatic (three color) Theory Young and Helmholtz three different retinal color receptors

Page 41: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Trichromatic Theory of Color

• Any color can be produced by mixing pure lights of blue, green, and red.

• There are three types of cones, each most sensitive to particular wavelengths.

• Ratio of the activities of the three types of cones indicates what color is sensed.

Page 42: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Opponent-Process Theory

• Ewald Hering

• Each of the three color sensitive elements are organized as pairs, where each pair member opposes, or inhibits, the other– Red-Green– Blue-Yellow– Black-White

Page 43: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Trichromatic and Opponent-Process Theories

Page 44: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Opponent-Process Theory

Page 45: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.
Page 46: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.20: Color Coding and Ganglion Cells

Page 47: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

The Chemical Senses

• Olfaction detects airborne chemicals– Our sense of smell

• Gustation detects chemicals in solution that come into contact with receptors inside the mouth– Our sense of taste

Page 48: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.23: The Olfactory System

Page 49: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Olfactory System

• Employs about 1,000 different types of receptors.

• Only sense that does not send its messages through the thalamus.

• Processing in several brain regions including frontal lobe and amygdala

• Strong relationship between olfaction and emotional memory

Page 50: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Olfactory System (cont’d.)

• Only sense that does not send its messages through the thalamus.

• Pathways from olfactory bulb sends information on for further processing in several brain regions.– Including frontal lobe and amygdala.

• Strong relationship between olfaction and emotional memory.

Page 51: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Pheromones

• Chemicals released by one animal, and when detected by another, can shape the second animal’s behavior or physiology.

• Role of pheromones in humans not clear

Page 52: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Age, Sex and Sense of Smell

Women

Men

10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90-99Age Group

4

3

2

0

Numberof correct

answers

Women and young adults have best sense of smell

Page 53: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Smell, Taste, and Flavor

• Smell and taste act together to form system known as flavor.

• Tastes and odors can prompt strong emotional responses.

• Nutritional state can affect taste and flavor of food and motivation to eat particular foods.

• Flavor includes other characteristics of food.

Page 54: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Somatic Senses and the Vestibular System

• Somatosensory systems are spread throughout the body

• Somatic senses include:– Skin senses of touch, temperature, and

pain– Kinesthesia

• Vestibular system tells the brain about the position and movement of the head

Page 55: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Touch

• Energy detected is physical pressure on tissue.

• Many nerve endings in the skin act as touch receptors.

• Touch is both an active and passive sense.

• Changes in touch provide most important sensory information.

Page 56: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Coding of Touch Information

• Intensity of the stimulus is coded by:– Firing rate of individual neurons and– The number of neurons stimulated.

• Location is coded by the location of the neurons responding to the touch.

Page 57: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Temperature

• Some of the skin’s sensory neurons respond to a change in temperature.– “Warm” and “cold” fibers

• Sensations of touch and temperature sometimes interact.

• Stimulation of the touch sense can have psychological and physiological effects.

Page 58: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Pain

• Pain provides information about impact of world on body.

• Information-carrying aspect of pain very similar to that of touch and temperature.

• Two types of nerve fibers carry pain signals from skin to the spinal chord.

• Cerebral cortex plays role in the experience of pain.

Page 59: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 4.25: Pain Pathways

Page 60: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Modulating Pain

• Gate Control Theory theory that the spinal cord contains a

neurological “gate” that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain

“gate” opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers

“gate” closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain

• Natural Analgesics– Serotonin– Endorphins

Page 61: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Proprioceptive Senses

• Sensory systems that provide information to the brain about:– The position of the body.– What each of part of the body is doing.

• Vestibular sense indicates the position of the head in space and its general movements.– Sense of balance.

Page 62: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Vestibular Sense

• Organs:– Vestibular sacs– Otoliths– Semicircular canals

• Neural connections to:– The cerebellum– The autonomic nervous system– The eye muscles

Page 63: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Kinesthesia

• Sense that indicates where the parts of the body are with respect to one another.– Necessary guide for

movement.

• Kinesthetic information comes primarily from the joints as well as muscles.

Page 64: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

PERCEPTION

Page 65: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Three Approaches to Perception

• Computational – tries to determine the computations that a machine would have to solve perceptual problems

• Constructivist – reality is constructed from fragments of sensory information

• Ecological – environment contains most of the information needed to form perceptions

Page 66: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Psychophysics

• Describes the relationship between the physical energy in the environment and the psychological experience of that energy

• Absolute Threshold – the minimum detectable amount of environmental energy a sensory system can detect

Page 67: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Absolute Thresholds Table 5.1

Page 68: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Signal-Detection Theory

• Sensitivity – a person’s ability to pick out a particular stimulus or signal

• Response Criterion – a person’s willingness or reluctance to say that a stimulus is present

• Signal-Detection Theory – model of our personal sensitivity and response criterion combined to determine whether or not a near-threshold stimulus has occurred

Page 69: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.4: Signal Detection

Page 70: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Judging Differences Between Stimuli

• Difference Threshold or Just-Noticeable Difference (JND)

• JND determined by two factors:– How much of a stimulus was there to

begin with?– Which sense is being stimulated?

Click the link below to see how JND impacts the consumer world:http://www.psfk.com/2009/03/media-arts-mondays-just-noticeable-

difference.html

Page 71: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Weber’s Law

• Weber’s Constant

• Law States That JND = KI– K is the Weber’s constant for a particular

sense.– I is the amount, or intensity, of the

stimulus.• The smaller K is, the more sensitive a sense is

to stimulus differences

Page 72: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Magnitude Estimation

• Magnitude estimation is how our perception of stimulus intensity is related to actual stimuli strength

• Fechner’s Law– Constant increases in physical energy will

produce smaller increases in perceived magnitude

• Steven’s Power Law– Describes a wider range of sensations

Page 73: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Illusions

• Illusion – incorrect perception of a stimulus

• Delusion – a false belief

• Hallucination – a perception in the absence of a stimulus

Page 74: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.5: Length Illusions

Page 75: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.6: Organize This!

Page 76: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Illusions

Ames room

Page 77: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Illusions

Ames room

Page 78: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Basic Processes in Perceptual Organization

• Figure-Ground Organization– Perceptual apparatus picks out some objects to be figures,

while others are less relevant in the background

• Grouping– Inherent properties of the stimulus environment lead people

to group them together Grouping Principles

Proximity--group nearby figures together Similarity--group figures that are similar Continuity--perceive continuous patterns Closure--fill in gaps Connectedness--spots, lines, and areas are seen as unit when

connected Synchrony – occur at the same time Common region – located within some boundary Connectedness – connected by other elements

Page 79: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.7: Reversible Images

Page 80: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure-Ground

Page 81: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.8: Gestalt Principles of Perceptual Grouping

Page 82: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

More Grouping Principles

Page 83: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Organization

• Likelihood Principle– We perceive objects in the way that

experience tells us is the most likely physical arrangement (consistent with Constructivism)

• Simplicity Principle– We organize stimulus elements in a way

that gives us the simplest possible perception

Page 84: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.9: Impossible Objects

Page 85: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perception of Location and Distance

• Two-Dimensional Location – uses an equation that takes information about where an image strikes the retina and adjusts it based on information about movement of your eyes and head– Visual dominance – bias toward using

visual information when it conflicts with information from other senses

Page 86: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Depth Perception• Our ability to perceive distance, allowing people to

experience the world in three-dimensions1. Interposition – closer objects block the view of

things further away2. Relative Size – the object producing a larger

image on the retina is perceived as closer3. Height in the Visual Field – more distant objects

are higher in the visual field4. Texture Gradient – graduated change in texture –

less detailed as distance increases5. Linear Perspective – the closer together 2

converging lines are, the greater the perceived distance

6. Clarity, Color, Shadow – distant objects appear hazier

7. Motion Parallax – objects closer appear to move rapidly, while those distant appear motionless

Page 87: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.10: Stimulus Cues for Depth Perception

Page 88: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Cues Based on Physiology

• Accommodation – muscles surrounding the lens either tighten (to focus on close objects) or relax (to focus on distant objects)

• Convergence – each eye rotates inward to see closer objects

• Binocular Disparity – the difference between the two retinal images of an object provides distance cues

Page 89: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Organization: Depth Perception

Visual Cliff

Page 90: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Organization: Depth Perception

Relative Size

Page 91: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Organization: Depth Perception

Interposition

Page 92: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Organization: Depth Perception

Page 93: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perception of Motion

• Looming – a rapid expansion in the size of an image so that it fills the retina and is perceived as an approaching object

• Stroboscopic Motion – our tendency to perceive motion through a series of flashing rapid light

Page 94: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Constancy

• The perception of objects as constant in size, shape and color

• Size Constancy – occurs as objects move closer or farther away

• Shape Constancy – occurs as an object appears the same, even though the shape of its retinal image changes

• Brightness Constancy – occurs so that no matter how the amount of light striking an object changes, its perceived brightness remains constant

Page 95: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.12: A Size Illusion

Page 96: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Perceptual Organization: Muller-Lyer Illusion

Page 97: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Figure 5.13: Brightness Contrast

Page 98: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Recognizing the Perceptual World

• The brain analyzes the incoming pattern of the stimulus and compares that pattern to information stored in the memory– Top-down processing – guided by knowledge and

expectations• Our experiences create schemas, or mental

representations of what we know about the world

– Bottom-up processing – relies on specific, detailed information from sensory receptors that are integrated and assembled into a whole

Page 99: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Parallel Distributed Processing Models (PDP)

• Units in a network operate parallelsimultaneously

• Each element is connected to all other computational elements

• Recognition occurs as a result of the simultaneous operation of connected units

Page 100: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Attention

• The process of directing and focusing certain psychological resources to enhance perception, performance, and mental experience

Page 101: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Articles

• http://www.hhmi.org/senses/

Page 102: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Illusions

• http://psylux.psych.tu-dresden.de/i1/kaw/diverses%20Material/www.illusionworks.com/index.html

Page 103: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Blind Spot Demonstration

• http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/bb/blindspot1.html

Page 104: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

Jeopardy

• http://www.uni.edu/walsh/jeopardy.html

Page 105: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

More Information on Sensation and Perception

• http://www.muhlenberg.edu/depts/psychology/lsnodgrass/sp/dem_links.html

Page 106: SENSATION & PERCEPTION CHAPTERS 4 & 5 AP PSYCHOLOGY.

References

• http://college.cengage.com/psychology/bernstein/psychology/7e/instructors/index.html

• http://www.lbusd.k12.ca.us/millikan/Teacher_folder/HawkinsS/AdPlPsychology2.htm