Top Banner
Thinking About Psychology Charles T. Blair-Broeker & Randal M. Ernst PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, © 2012 Monday, January 5, 15
124

Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

May 11, 2018

Download

Documents

nguyenbao
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: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Thinking About Psychology

Charles T. Blair-Broeker & Randal M. ErnstPowerPoint Presentation Slides

by Kent Korek Germantown High SchoolWorth Publishers, © 2012

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 2: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Biopsychology Domain

•Andreas Pollok/the Image Bank/Getty images

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 3: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Sensation and Perception

Davies and Starr/The Image Bank/Getty Images

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 4: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Sensation

Module 06

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 5: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Module Overview• Basic Principles• The Visual System• Hearing• Other Senses

Click on the any of the above hyperlinks to go to that section in the presentation.Monday, January 5, 15

Page 6: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Introduction

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 7: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Sensation

• The process by which sensory systems (eyes, ears, and other sensory organs) and nervous system receive stimuli from our environment.

• A person’s awareness of the world

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 8: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Bottom-Up Processing

• Information processing that analyzes on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory systems.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 9: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Perception

• The process of organizing and interpreting incoming sensory information.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 10: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Top-Down Processing

• Information processing that draws on expectations and experiences to interpret incoming sensory information.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 11: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Top-Down Processing

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 12: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Basic Principles

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 13: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Threshold

• An edge or a boundary

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 14: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Absolute Threshold

• The minimum amount of a stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus.

• Amount of a stimulus that a person can detect 50% of the time

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 15: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Difference Threshold

• The minimum amount of difference needed to detect that two stimuli are not the same.

• Also called just noticeable difference

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 16: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Signal Detection Theory

• A theory that predicts how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise).

• Developed out of the Cold War

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 17: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Signal Detection Theory

• Three kinds of variables–Stimulus variables–Environmental variables–Organismic variables

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 18: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Sensory Adaptation

• Diminished sensitivity to constant and unchanging stimulation.

• If a stimulus is constant and unchanging, eventually a person may fail to respond to it

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 19: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Selective Attention

• Focusing conscious awareness on a particular stimulus to the exclusion of others.

• The ability to focus on one stimulus at a time

• Allows a person to function in a world filled with many stimuli

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 20: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Selective Attention

From Leeper, R. W. (1935). A study of a neglected portion of the field of learning: The development of sensory organization. Journal of Genetic Psychology, 46, 41-75. Reprinted by permission of Taylor & Francis Ltd, http:// www.tandf.co.uk/journals

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 21: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

The Visual System

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 22: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

The Visual System: The Nature of Light

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 23: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Electromagnetic Energy

• An energy spectrum that includes X-rays, radar, and radio waves

• A small portion of the spectrum includes light visible to the human eye

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 24: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

The Electromagnetic Spectrum

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 25: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hue

• The color of light as determined by the wavelength of the light energy

• Includes: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet (ROY G BIV)

• The eye can detect 7 million separate hues

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 26: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Wavelength

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 27: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Amplitude

• The brightness of light as determined by height of the wave

• The taller the wave, the brighter the color

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 28: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Amplitude

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 29: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

The Visual System: The Structure of the

Visual System

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 30: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Cornea

• The clear, curved bulge on the front of the eye that bends light rays to begin focusing them.

• Begins to focus the light by bending it toward a central focal point

• Protects the eye

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 31: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye – Cornea

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 32: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Iris

• A ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye and

• regulates the size of the pupil.• Changes its size--allowing more or less

light to enter the eye

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 33: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye - Iris

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 34: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Pupil

• The adjustable opening in the center of the iris,

• which controls the amount of light entering the eye.

• In bright conditions the iris expands, making the pupil smaller.

• In dark conditions the iris contracts, making the pupil larger.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 35: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye - Pupil

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 36: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Lens

• A transparent structure behind the pupil in the eye that changes shape to focus images on the retina.

• Muscles that change the thickness of the lens change how the light is bent thereby focusing the image

• Glasses or contacts correct problems in the lens’ ability to focus.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 37: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye - Lens

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 38: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Nearsightedness and Farsightedness

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 39: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Nearsightedness and Farsightedness

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 40: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Nearsightedness and Farsightedness

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 41: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Retina

• Light-sensitive surface at the back of the eyeball.

• Contains cells that convert light energy to nerve impulses

• Made up of three layers of cells–Receptor cells–Bipolar cells–Ganglion cells

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 42: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye - Retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 43: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Receptor Cells• Specialized cells in every sensory system of

the body that can turn other different kinds of energy into action potentials (neural impulses) that the brain can process.

• These cells are present in every sensory system to change (transduce) some other form of energy into neural impulses.

• In sight they change light into neural impulses the brain can understand.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 44: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Rods

• Visual receptor cells located in the retina that can detect only black, white and gray.

• Respond to less light than do cones

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 45: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Cones

• Visual receptor cells located in the retina that can detect sharp details and color.

• Need more light than the rods• Many cones are clustered in the fovea.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 46: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Fovea

• The central focal point of the retina• High concentration of cones• The spot where vision is best (most

detailed)

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 47: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye - Fovea

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 48: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Rods versus Cones

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 49: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Bipolar Cells

• Gather information from the rods and cones and pass it on to the ganglion cells

• Cells that form the middle layer in the retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 50: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Ganglion Cells

• Pass the information from the bipolar cells through their axons

• Together these cells form the optic nerve.

• The top layer of the cells in the retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 51: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Visual Processing in the Retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 52: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Visual Processing in the Retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 53: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Visual Processing in the Retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 54: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Visual Processing in the Retina

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 55: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Optic Nerve

• The nerve that carries visual information from the eye to the occipital lobes of the brain.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 56: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye – Optic Nerve

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 57: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Blind Spot

• The point at which the optic nerve travels through the retina to exit the eye;

• the lack of rods and cones at this point, creates a small blind spot.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 58: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Eye – Blind Spot

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 59: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

The Visual System: Color Vision

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 60: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Trichromatic (three-color) Theory

• A theory of color vision that says cones are sensitive to red, green and blue light - the three colors that combine to create millions of color combinations.

• Based on work of Helmholtz and Young• Similar to the design of a color TV

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 61: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Subtractive Color Mixing

• When mixing colored paints, each new color SUBTRACTS (soaks up) another wavelength.

• Red, blue, and yellow combine to make black paint.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 62: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 63: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Additive Color Mixing

• When mixing colored lights, each new color ADDS another wavelength.

• Red, green, and blue combine to make white light.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 64: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Color Deficient Vision

• People who lack one of the three types of cones

• Usually the red or green receptors are missing

• Usually referred to as color blindness• In inherited and found more in males

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 65: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Opponent-Process Theory of Color

• A theory of color vision that says color is processed by cones organized in opponent pairs

• (red-green, yellow-blue, black-white); • light that stimulated one half of the pair

inhibits the other half.• Explains the afterimage effect

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 66: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Afterimage Effect

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 67: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 68: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hearing

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 69: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hearing: The Nature of Sound

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 70: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Sound

• Sound, like light, comes in waves• Sound is vibration• Features of sound include:

–Pitch–Hertz–decibels

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 71: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Pitch

• A sound’s highness or lowness, which depends on the frequency of the sound wave.

• Is measured as hertz (Hz)

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 72: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hertz (Hz)

• A measure of the number of sound wave peaks per second; measures “frequency”

• Determines the pitch of the sound• Human hearing goes from 20 Hz to

20,000 Hz

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 73: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Decibel (dB)

• A measure of the height of the sound wave

• Determines the loudness of the sound• Sometimes called amplitude

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 74: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 75: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hearing: The Structure of the

Auditory System

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 76: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Sound Waves

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 77: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Auditory Canal

• The opening through which sound waves travel as they move into the ear for processing

• Ends at the tympanic membrane (eardrum)

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 78: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Auditory Canal

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 79: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Tympanic Membrane (eardrum)

• The tissue barrier that transfers sound vibration from the air to the tine bones of the middle ear

• Can be damaged by objects in the ear or exceptionally loud noises

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 80: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Tympanic Membrane

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 81: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Ossicles

• Three tiny bones that transfer sound waves from the eardrum to the cochlea

• Hammer, anvil and stirrup

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 82: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear - Occicles

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 83: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Cochlea

• The major organ of hearing; • a snail shaped bony body tube fluid-

filled in the inner ear • where sound waves are changed to

neural impulses.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 84: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear - Cochlea

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 85: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Oval Window

• The point on the surface of the cochlea which receives the sound vibration from the ossicles

• As the oval window vibrates, the fluid in the cochlea vibrates.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 86: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Oval Window

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 87: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hair Cells

• The receptor cells for hearing; • they’re are located in the cochlea and • are responsibly for changing sound

vibrations into neural impulses.• Similar to the rods and cones within the

eye

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 88: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear - Hair Cells

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 89: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Auditory Nerve

• The nerve that carries sound information from the ears to the temporal lobes of the brain.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 90: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Auditory Nerve

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 91: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Semicircular Canals

• Organs in the inner ear used in sensing body orientation and balance (vestibular sense)

• Relies on fluid in the canals• Spinning in circles disrupts the fluid.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 92: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Semicircular Canals

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 93: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Divisions of the Ear

• Ear’s structure can be divided into:–The outer ear–The middle ear–The inner ear

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 94: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Divisions of the Ear

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 95: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Divisions of the Ear

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 96: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Divisions of the Ear

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 97: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Hearing: Sound Localization

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 98: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Localization of Sound

• Locating where sound is originating from

• Done through two cues:–Which ear hears the sound first?–Which ear hears the louder sound?

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 99: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Localization of Sound

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 100: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Other Senses

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 101: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Other Senses: Taste

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 102: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Taste

• Taste is a chemical sense.• Receptor cells are located primarily on

the tongue and in the mouth.• Four different tastes:

–Salty, sweet, sour and bitter• Damaged taste receptor cells are

replaced within a few days.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 103: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Linda Bartoshuk

• Renowned researcher on the role of genetics and the treatment of disorders in the chemical senses of taste and smell.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 104: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Supertasters

• People with an abundance of taste receptors

• Approximately 25% of the population

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 105: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Nontasters

• People with a minimum of taste receptors

• Taste with less intensity than the rest of the population

• Approximately 25% of the population

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 106: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Other Senses: Smell

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 107: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Smell

• Smell is a chemical sense.• Olfactory cells in the upper nasal

passages detect molecules in the air.• Taste and smell interact to produce

flavor.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 108: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Olfactory Cells

• The chemical receptor cells for smell• Located in the nasal passages

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 109: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Smell

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 110: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Smell

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 111: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Smell

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 112: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Other Senses: Touch

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 113: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Touch

• Touch receptors are on the skin• Four basic skin senses are

–Pain, warmth, cold, and pressure• All skin sensations are a combination of

these four basic senses

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 114: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Gate-control Theory of Pain

• Pain messages travel on one set of nerve fibers containing pain gates.

• The gates are open when pain is felt.• Other sensory messages go through

another set of fibers.• The nonpain fibers can close the pain

gates to stop the sense of pain.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 115: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Other Senses: Body Senses

Module 06: Sensation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 116: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Kinesthetic Sense

• The system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts.

• Relies on receptor cells from the muscles and joints

• One’s leg “falling asleep” is a disruption of the kinesthetic sense

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 117: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Vestibular Sense

• The system for sensing body orientation and balance,

• which is located in the semicircular canals in the inner ear.

• Relies on fluid in the canals• Spinning in circles disrupts the fluid.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 118: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Parts of the Ear – Semicircular Canals

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 119: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

The End

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 120: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Teacher Information• Types of Files

– This presentation has been saved as a “basic” Powerpoint file. While this file format placed a few limitations on the presentation, it insured the file would be compatible with the many versions of Powerpoint teachers use. To add functionality to the presentation, teachers may want to save the file for their specific version of Powerpoint.

• Animation– Once again, to insure compatibility with all versions of Powerpoint, none

of the slides are animated. To increase student interest, it is suggested teachers animate the slides wherever possible.

• Adding slides to this presentation– Teachers are encouraged to adapt this presentation to their personal

teaching style. To help keep a sense of continuity, blank slides which can be copied and pasted to a specific location in the presentation follow this “Teacher Information” section.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 121: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Teacher Information• Domain Coding

– Just as the textbook is organized around the APA National Standards, these Powerpoints are coded to those same standards. Included at the top of almost every slide is a small stripe, color coded to the APA National Standards.

• Scientific Inquiry Domain• Biopsychology Domain• Development and Learning Domain• Social Context Domain• Cognition Domain• Individual Variation Domain• Applications of Psychological Science Domain

• Key Terms and Definitions in Red– To emphasize their importance, all key terms from the text and their

definitions are printed in red. To maintain consistency, the definitions on the Powerpoint slides are identical to those in the textbook.

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 122: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Teacher Information• Hyperlink Slides - Immediately after the unit title slide, a page (usually

slide #4 or #5) can be found listing all of the module’s subsections. While in slide show mode, clicking on any of these hyperlinks will take the user directly to the beginning of that subsection. This allows teachers quick access to each subsection.

• Continuity slides - Throughout this presentations there are slides, usually of graphics or tables, that build on one another. These are included for three purposes.

• By presenting information in small chunks, students will find it easier to process and remember the concepts.

• By continually changing slides, students will stay interested in the presentation.• To facilitate class discussion and critical thinking. Students should be encouraged to

think about “what might come next” in the series of slides.

• Please feel free to contact me at [email protected] with any questions, concerns, suggestions, etc. regarding these presentations. Kent KorekGermantown High SchoolGermantown, WI 53022

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 123: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Name of Concept

• Use this slide to add a concept to the presentation

Monday, January 5, 15

Page 124: Thinking About Psychology - Norwell High School€¢ The process by which sensory systems ... and nervous system receive stimuli ... on the raw stimuli entering through the many sensory

Name of Concept

Use this slide to add a table, chart, clip art, picture, diagram, or video clip. Delete this box when finished

Monday, January 5, 15