What is sensation?
The passive process of bringing information from the outside world into the body and to the brain.
The process is passive in the sense that we do not have to be consciously engaging in a “sensing” process.
What is perception?
The active process of selecting, organizing, and interpreting the information brought to the brain by the senses.
How does sensation occur?
Sensation occurs like this:-
a) Sensory organs absorb energy from a physical stimulus in the environment.
b) Sensory receptors convert this energy into neural impulses and send them to the brain.
c) This process is referred to as transduction.
What do we mean by transduction?
-Communication between the brain & the
rest of the body (& between different
regions of the brain) occurs via neuron.
-All senses involve something called
receptor cells. Their job is to transduce
(transform or even “translate”) physical
stimulation/physical energy from the
environment into electrochemical
messages that can be understood by the
brain.
Perception follows transduction.
a) the brain organizes the information and translates it into something meaningful.
b) But what does “meaningful” mean?
How do we know what information is important and should be focused on? = Sensation perception process.
The Sensation-Perception
Process
-The process of seeing an object and recognizing it as a car, house or whatever
The process of seeing an object and recognizing it as a flower, for example, would involve the following steps:
Selective attention and Perpetual expectancy
1) Selective Attention - the process of discriminating between what is important & is irrelevant and selective attention is influenced by motivation.
2) Perceptual Expectancy - how we perceive the world is a function of our past experiences, culture, and biological makeup. When we look at a highway, we expect to see cars, trucks, etc, NOT airplanes. But someone from a different country with different experiences and history may not have any idea what to expect and thus be surprised when they see cars go driving by.
What is psychophysics?
The study of how physical stimuli are translated into psychological experience.
-Sternberg (2004) explains psychophysics as the study of the physical energy stimulation of the sensory organs which resulted in meaningful psychological experience
In order to measure these events, psychologists use THRESHOLDS.
Thresholds
Signal detection theory
People do not always detect a signal at the same time or in the same way, and sometimes they even get it wrong
Discriminating between stimuli:
Therefore, JND defines differences
Example: Difference Threshold
The greater the intensity (ex., weight) of a stimulus,
the greater the change needed to produce a
noticeable change.
-When you pick up a 5 kg weight, and then a 10
kg weight, you can feel a big difference between
the two. However, when you pick up 100 kg, and
then 105 kgs, it is much more difficult to feel the
difference.
Detection of a stimulus involves some decision making process as well as a sensory process.
Additionally, both sensory and decision-making processes are influenced by many more factors than just intensity.
a) Noise - how much outside interference exists.
b) Criterion - the level of assurance that you decide must be met before you take action. Involves higher mental processes. You set criteria based on expectations and consequences of inaccuracy.
- At a party, you order a pizza…you need to pay attention so that you will be able to detect the appropriate signal (doorbell), especially since there is a lot of noise at the party.
- But when you first order the pizza, you know it won’t be there in 2 minutes, so you don’t really pay attention for the doorbell. As the time for the pizza to arrive approaches, however, your criterion changes…you become more focused on the doorbell and less on extraneous noise
VISION
Light
Structure of the Eye
Specialist cells in the eye pick up light in the form of wavelengths
-Before the light energy reaches these cells, it first has to travel through the eye itself
The route that light travels it goes through the following steps:
#The iris is the colored part of the eye that surrounds the pupil. Sternberg (2004) explains that the iris is a circular band muscles that make the iris bigger or smaller
There are 2 types of photoreceptors: rods and cones, thus named because of their distinctive shape.
The Path to the Brain and Visual acuity.
The Pathway to the Brain
=The electrochemical signals follow a route from the optic nerve through to the occipital lobe in the back of the brain
= From the occipital lobe, the message may then be sent to other areas of the brain for further processing
Visual Acuity
=How well a person can see objects and distinguish between objects in the environment.
Color vision
Colour Vision
=Seeing color involves a combination of 3 factors:
Visual Perception
-In order to make the visual world meaningful, the process of perception relies on the elements of the sensation that enters the brain, as well as memory,
past experience and the culture in which one lives
Processing of Visual Signals in the brain
u
-Primary visual areas, Secondary and tertiary visual areas.
Primary Visual Areas
Secondary and Tertiary Visual Areas
Perpetual constancy
Principles of perceptual constancy show that we use cues in the environment to keep our world predictable and stable
Colour constancy – this is when the perception of a color stays the same, although the image of it may change
Size constancy – this refers to the fact that, even though an object gets smaller on the retina as you get further away from it, you know its size remains the same
Shape constancy – this is when the shape of something changes on the retina, but you know its shape remains
the same
Depth Perception
The ability to perceive the three-dimensional quality of our world
We use both monocular and binocular cues from the environment to tell us about the depth
Form Perception
Gestalt psychologists explained a set of principles that we use in order to perceive our world visually
Principles state that we take the elements that make up an object and form a meaningful whole from them