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Ch. 3 - Sensation and Perception
Sensation - The experience of sensory
stimulation
Perception - The process of creating
meaningful patterns from raw sensory
information
1.
The Nature of Sensory Processes
A. The Basic Process
Receptor Cell- A specialized cell that responds to a
particular type of energy
B. Sensory Thresholds
Absolute
The least amount of energy that can be detected
50% of the time
Adaptation
An adjustment of the senses to the level of
stimulation
Sensory Thresholds
Difference
The smallest change in stimulation that can be
detected 50 % of the time
Subliminal perception
Below our level of awareness
Extrasensory perception
Extraordinary perception such as sensing the
future
2. Vision
A. The Visual System
Cornea
transparent protective coating over the front of the
eye
Pupil
small opening in the iris through which light enters
the eye
Iris
colored part of the eye
Lens
transparent structure inside the pupil that focuses
light onto the retina
Retina
lining of the eye containing receptor cells that are
sensitive to light
Retina Movie
The Visual System
Visual System Movie
#1
Visual System Movie
#2
Visual System Movie
#3
Receptor cells
Wavelengths - different energies represented in
the electromagnetic spectrum
Rods - receptor cells in the retina for night vision
Cones - receptor cells in the retina responsible for
color vision.
Bipolar Cells - connect receptors to ganglion
Fovea / visual acuity - area of the retina with the
sharpest vision
Retina / Fovea Movie
Cones respond to light and dark as well as
to color or different wavelengths of light
Adaptation
Dark
Increased sensitivity of rods and cones in
darkness
Light
Decreased sensitivity of rods and cones in
bright light
Afterimage
Sense experience that occurs after a visual
stimulus has been removed
Eye to brain
Neurons that connect the bipolar cells in the eyes
to the brain
Optic nerve are bundle of axons of ganglion cells
that carries neural messages from each eye
Blind spot
place where the axons of all the cells leave the
retina (no receptors)
The bipolar cells connect to ganglion cells,
whose axons converge to form the optic nerve
that carries messages to the brain
B. Color Vision
Properties of color
Hues – Colors such as red and green
Saturation - Vividness of a hue
Brightness - Nearness of a color to white
Theories of color vision
Subtractive color
Mixing pigments
Additive color mixing
Lights, T.V., monitor (RGB)
Trichromatic
theory (Helmholtz)
Colorblindness (Tri-,Di-, and
Monochromats)
3 different receptors (RGB)
People inherit receptors which respond
differently
Opponent-process
theory (Hering)
Three sets of color receptors
Yellow-blue, red-green, black-white
Either/or response
C. Color Vision in Other Species
The opponent-process theory maintains that receptors are
specialized to respond to either member of the three basic color pairs:
red-green, yellow-blue, and black-white (dark and light)
3. Hearing
A. Sound
Sound waves
Changes in pressure caused by molecules of air
moving
Frequency
Number of cycles per second in a wave; pitch
Hertz
Cycles per second; frequency
Pitch
Frequency of vibrations, results in tone
Amplitude
Magnitude; loudness
Decibels
Measurement of loudness
Overtones - Multiples of the basic tone
Timbre - Quality of texture of sound
Amplitude is the magnitude of a wave; it
largely determines the loudness of a sound.
Loudness is measured in decibels
B. The Ear
Hammer, anvil, stirrup
3 small bones in the middle ear that relay
vibrations
Oval window
Membrane between middle ear and inner ear
Hearing begins when sound waves strike the eardrum and
cause it to vibrate. This vibration, in turn, makes three
bones in the middle ear—the hammer, the anvil, and the
stirrup—vibrate in sequence
Cochlea
Part of inner ear containing fluid that vibrates
and then causes the basilar membrane to
vibrate
Basilar membrane
Vibrating membrane in the cochlea which
contains receptor cells
Neural connections
Auditory nerve
Connection from ear to brain
Bilateral
Inside the organ of Corti are tiny hair cells that act as sensory
receptors for hearing. Stimulation of these receptors produces auditory
signals that are transmitted to the brain through the auditory nerve.
The brain pools the information from thousands of these cells to create
the perception of sounds
C. Theories of Hearing
Place theory
Pitch is determined by location of vibration
Frequency theory
Pitch is determined by frequency hair cells fire
Volley Principle
Pattern of sequential firing determines pitch
Hearing disorders
Damaged eardrum
Damaged middle ear bones
Damaged nerves
Loud music, tools, etc
Tinnitus 1% of population
4. The Other Senses
A. Smell
Detecting common odors
Communicating with pheromones
B. Taste
Receptor cells in taste buds
The sense of smell is activated by substances carried by
airborne molecules into the nasal cavities, where the
substances activate highly specialized receptors for smell,
located in the olfactory epithelium
The receptor cells for the sense of taste are
housed in the taste buds on the tongue, which, in
turn, are found in the papillae, the small bumps
on the surface of the tongue
C. Kinesthetic and Vestibular Senses
Stretch receptors
Sense muscle stretch and contraction
Golgi tendon organs (injections)
Sense movement of tendons
Vestibular senses
Senses of equilibrium and body position
D. Sensations of Motion
Vestibular organs are also responsible for motion
sickness
May be caused by discrepancies between visual
information and vestibular sensation
E. The Skin Senses
Skin receptors for pressure, temperature, and pain
Importance of touch
F. Pain
Individual differences
Gate control theory
Gate
in spinal cord which controls transmission of
pain to brain
Biopsychosocial
theory
The Placebo Effect
Alternative approaches
5. Perception
A. Perceptual Organization
B. Perceptual Constancies
Size constancy
Shape constancy
Brightness constancy
Color constancy
Perceptual Organization
Perceptual constancy is our tendency to perceive objects
as unchanging in the face of changes in sensory
stimulation. Once we have formed a stable perception of
an object, we can recognize it from almost any angle
C. Perception of Distance and Depth
Moon Movie
D. Perception of Movement
E. Visual Illusions
When we use sensory information to create perceptions,
we fill in the missing information, group various objects
together, see whole objects, and hear meaningful sounds
Visual illusions occur when we use a
variety of sensory cues to create perceptual
experiences that do not actually exist
F. Observer Characteristics: Individual
Differences and Culture Motivation
Value
Expectation
Cognitive Style
Experience and Culture
Personality
Superposition is a monocular distance cue
in which one object, by partly blocking a
second, appears closer
Linear perspective is another monocular cue to distance
and depth based on the fact that two parallel lines seem to
come together at the horizon