Transcript Sensation
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Chapter 5
Sensation
James A. McCubbin, PhD
Clemson University
Worth Publishers
Sensation
Sensation
a process by which our sensory
receptors and nervous system receive
and represent stimulus energy
Perception
a process of organizing and interpreting
sensory information, enabling us to
recognize meaningful objects and
events
Sensation and Perception
Paris
in the
the spring
Sensation and Perception
Sense
Input
Perception
Sight
colors/shapes object/event
Hearing
sound/noise words/music
Touch
pressure/temp
feel of object
Taste sour/salty/bitter/sweet flavor
Smell spicy/resinous/burned
odor
rotten/fruity/flowery
Perception
Physiological variables:
Receptors available
Receptor limits
Receptor abnormalities
Sensory adaptation- diminished sensitivity as
a consequence of constant stimulation
Sensory Adaptation
Diminished sensitivity as a consequence of
constant stimulation.
Put a band aid on your arm and after awhile
you don’t sense it.
Perception
Psychological variables
Interests
Motivation
Expectancy set
Emotion
Attitudes
Values
Gestaltists
Gestalt means “whole” in German. The
Gestaltists believed that people look to
form patterns and complete whole images
when they perceive things around them
Sensation and Perception
Sensation
Our
sensory
and
perceptual
processes
work
together to
help us
sort out
complex
processes
Sensation and Perception
Perceptually Impaired
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Top-Down Processing
Information processing guided by higher-level
mental processes as we construct perceptions,
drawing on our experience and expectations.
THE CHT
Bottom-up Processing
Analysis of the stimulus begins with the sense
receptors and works up to the level of the brain
and mind.
Letter “A” is really a black blotch broken down into
features by the brain that we perceive as an “A.”
Sensation- Basic
Principles
Psychophysics
study of the relationship between
physical characteristics of stimuli and
our psychological experience of them
Light- brightness
Sound- volume
Pressure- weight
Taste- sweetness
Sensation- Thresholds
Absolute Threshold
minimum stimulation needed to detect a
particular stimulus 50% of the time
Difference Threshold
minimum difference between two stimuli
required for detection 50% of the time
just noticeable difference (JND)
Sensation- Thresholds
Signal Detection Theory
predicts how and when we detect the presence
of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background
stimulation (noise)
assumes that there is no single absolute
threshold
detection depends partly on person’s
experience
expectations
motivation
level of fatigue
Sensation- Thresholds
100
Percentage
of correct
detections
Subliminal
75
50
Subliminal
stimuli
25
0
Low
Absolute
threshold
Intensity of stimulus
Medium
When stimuli are
below one’s
absolute
threshold for
conscious
awareness
Sensation- Thresholds
Weber’s Law- to perceive as different,
two stimuli must differ by a constant
minimum percentage
light intensity- 8%
weight- 2%
tone frequency- 0.3%
Ex. A three way bulb
Weber’s Law
Vision
Vision
Pupil- adjustable opening in the
center of the eye
Iris- a ring of muscle that forms the
colored portion of the eye around the
pupil and controls the size of the
pupil opening
Lens- transparent structure behind
pupil that changes shape to focus
images on the retina
Retina’s Reaction
to Light
Optic nerve- nerve that carries neural
impulses from the eye to the brain
Blind Spot- point at which the optic nerve
leaves the eye, creating a “blind spot”
because there are no receptor cells located
there
Fovea- central point in the retina, around
which the eye’s cones cluster
Blind Spot
Vision- Stabilized
Images on the Retina
Vision
Transduction
conversion of one form of energy to
another
in sensation, transforming of stimulus
energies into neural impulses
Wavelength
the distance from the peak of one
wave to the peak of the next
Vision
Accommodation- the process by which
the eye’s lens changes shape to help
focus near or far objects on the retina
Retina- the light-sensitive inner surface of
the eye, containing receptor rods and
cones plus layers of neurons that begin
the processing of visual information
Vision
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
Vision
Farsighted
Vision
Nearsighted
Vision
Normal
Vision
Vision
Hue
dimension of color determined by
wavelength of light
Intensity
amount of energy in a wave
determined by amplitude
brightness
loudness
The spectrum of
electromagnetic
energy
Vision- Physical
Properties of Waves
Short wavelength=high frequency
(bluish colors, high-pitched sounds)
Great amplitude
(bright colors, loud sounds)
Long wavelength=low frequency
(reddish colors, low-pitched sounds)
Small amplitude
(dull colors, soft sounds)
Retina’s Reaction
to Light- Receptors
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
Photoreceptors
E.R. Lewis, Y.Y. Zeevi, F.S Werblin, 1969
Color-Deficient Vision
People who suffer
red-green
blindness have
trouble perceiving
the number within
the design
Visual Information
Processing
Trichromatic (three color) Theory
Young and Helmholtz
three different retinal color receptors
red
green
blue
Afterimages
Opponent ProcessAfterimage Effect
Visual Information
Processing
Opponent-Process Theory- opposing retinal
processes enable color vision
“ON”
“OFF”
red
green
green
red
blue
yellow
yellow
blue
black
white
white
black
Pathways from the Eyes
to the Visual Cortex
Visual Information
Processing
Color Constancy
Perceiving familiar objects as having
consistent color, even if changing
illumination alters the wavelengths
reflected by the object
Feature Detection
Ross Kinnaird/ Allsport/ Getty Images
Nerve cells in the visual cortex respond to
specific features, such as edges, angles, and
movement.
How the Brain
Perceives
Illusory Contours
Visual Information
Processing
Parallel Processing
simultaneous processing of several
aspects of a problem simultaneously
The Ear
Dr. Fred Hossler/ Visuals Unlimited
The Ear
Pinna- the external funnel shaped portion
of the ear
External Auditory Canal -directs sound
waves to the eardrum
Eardrum- thin piece of skin that vibrates
to incoming sound
Audition- The Ear
Middle Ear
chamber between eardrum and cochlea containing
three tiny bones (hammer, anvil, stirrup) that
concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the
cochlea’s oval window
Inner Ear
innermost part of the ear, contining the cochlea,
semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs
Cochlea
coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through
which contains the cilia receptors for hearing on the
basilar membrane.
Audition
Audition
the sense of hearing
Frequency
the number of complete wavelengths
that pass a point in a given time
Pitch (measured in Hertz)
a tone’s highness or lowness
depends on frequency
Audition
Place Theory
the theory that links the pitch we hear with
the place where the cochlea’s membrane is
stimulated
Frequency Theory
the theory that the rate of nerve impulses
traveling up the auditory nerve matches the
frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to
sense its pitch
How We Locate
Sounds
Location with Sound
Doppler Shift- as something approaches
the pitch is higher and as it recedes the
pitch is lower. Ex. The train coming into
the station.
The Intensity of Some
Common Sounds
Audition
Older people tend to hear low
frequencies well but suffer hearing loss
for high frequencies
Amplitude required for
perception relative to
20-29 year-old group
1
time
10
times
100
times
1000
times
32
64
128
256
512
1024 2048 4096
8192 16384
Frequency of tone in waves per second
Low
Pitch
High
Deafness
Tinnitus- ringing in the ears when there is
no external auditory stimulation caused by
exposure to loud noise and represents
damage to the auditory nerve.
Deafness
Conduction Hearing Loss
hearing loss caused by damage to the
mechanical system that conducts sound
waves to the cochlea
Nerve Hearing Loss
hearing loss caused by damage to the
cochlea’s receptor cells or to the auditory
nerve
Deafness
Choices in adjusting to hearing loss:
Lip reading- family members and others must
be careful to insure that their lips can be seen at
all times during conversation
American Sign Language- a set of symbols that
represent words or phrases
Cochlear Implant- an electrode is placed in the
cochlea that artificially sends sound to the
temporal lobe.
Touch
Skin Sensations
pressure
only skin sensation
with identifiable
receptors most on
the hands and back
of neck EX back vs.
face 2pt. threshold
warmth
cold
pain
Touch
Bruce Ayers/ Stone/ Getty Images
The sense of touch is a mix of four distinct skin
senses—pressure, warmth, cold, and pain.
Skin Senses
Only pressure has identifiable receptors. All other
skin sensations are variations of pressure, warmth,
cold and pain.
Pressure
Burning hot
Vibration
Vibration
Cold, warmth and pain
Pain
Pain tells the body that something has gone wrong.
Usually pain results from damage to the skin and
other tissues. A rare disease exists in which the
afflicted person feels no pain.
AP Photo/ Stephen Morton
Ashley Blocker (right) feels neither pain
nor extreme hot or cold.
Biopsychosocial Influences
Gate-Control Theory
Melzack and Wall (1965, 1983) proposed that our
spinal cord contains neurological “gates” that
either block pain or allow it to be sensed.
Gary Comer/ PhototakeUSA.com
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
Pain
State of mind can affect intensity of pain:
WWI soldiers were relieved to be
wounded to escape the terror of the
battlefield.
Athletes “play with pain” due to
endorphins and realize the next day how
they have injured themselves.
Pain tolerance
Touch
There seems to a biological need for touch.
Babies who are not touched suffer from “failure
to thrive” which means they do not grow and
eventually die.
Premature babies in a study by Tiffany Field
wear proven to benefit from daily massage and
went home from the hospital sooner.
In adults massage lowers cortisol levels and
reduces the effect of stress.
People in this culture have been “touch
starved”.
Body Position and
Movement
Kinesthesis
the system for sensing the position and
movement of individual body parts
Proprioception-sense of the movement of
muscles and tendons (body parts) in space.
Vestibular Sense
the sense of body movement and position
including the sense of balance
Taste
Traditionally, taste sensations consisted of sweet,
salty, sour, and bitter tastes. Recently, receptors for
a fifth taste have been discovered called “Umami”.
Sweet
Sour
Salty
Bitter
Umami
(Fresh
Chicken)
Taste
Taste Receptors
Taste
Taste Sensations
sweet
sour
salty
Bitter
Some taste sensations are genetically programmed, such as sweet,
and finding bitter and sour foods unpleasant
A study of babies had sweet eliciting smiles, lip smacking, and sour
eliciting protrusion of tongue
These reactions make good evolutionary sense
Animals tend to be neophobic, and human children are reluctant to
try new things
One experiment asked a group of subjects to taste two groups of
food (that were the same). When the items were accurately named
(chopped tomatoes, oatmeal, beefsteak) more willing them when
given novel names (pendula fruit, lat, langua steak)
Taste
Moisture is necessary for taste buds to
function.
Taste buds are located in the fungiform
papillae or bumps on the tongue. There
are many taste buds in each bump.
Supertasters have an extraordinary
number of taste buds and fungiform
papillae. They can always taste PROP.
Spicy food tastes very hot to supertasters
as the taste bud are linked to pain
receptors that respond to the hot oil.
Taste
Sensory interaction- taste is highly
dependent on smell. The two together
create flavor. This is evident when you
have a cold. Taste also depends on sight.
If it doesn’t look good, it doesn’t taste
good.
Chocolate increases serotonin particularly
in women and increases happiness.
Smell
Olfactory
nerve
Olfactory
bulb
Nasal
passage
Receptor cells in
olfactory membrane
Smell
Like taste, smell is a chemical sense. Odorants
enter the nasal cavity to stimulate 5 million
receptors to sense smell. Unlike taste, there are
many different forms of smell.
Age, Sex and Sense
of Smell
Number
of correct
answers
Women and young adults
have best sense of smell
4
Women
3
Men
2
0
10-19
20-29
30-39
40-49
50-59
60-69
Age Group
70-79
80-89 90-99
Smell
Theories of smell:
Lock and Key- odor molecules fit specific
receptor sites
Receptor construction- as a molecule
enters the system an appropriate receptor
is formed.
Smell
Olfactory cells are located on the cilia in
the upper portion of the nose. They are
surrounded by mucus to trap odor
molecules.
Smell is associated with memory
encoding.
Smell declines with age
Anosmia- 2 million people have no sense
of smell. Can be the result of head trauma
or infection or cold.
Smell
Pheromones-sexual signals through
smell. Used by animals and maybe
humans. Ex. Sweaty t-shirts,
menstrual synchrony
Smell is important to taste. Ex. When
one has a cold.