AP Psychology Unit 3: Sensation and Perception

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Sensory Adaptation

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60 Terms

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Sensory Adaptation

Decreasing responsiveness to stimuli due to constant stimulation

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Sensory Habituation

Perception of sensations partially due to how focused someone is on them

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Perception

What sensations activate senses + what a person is focused on

The process of understanding and interpreting sensations

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Cocktail-Party Phenomenon

Brain focuses attention on a particular stimuli (usually auditory like having your name called in a crowded room)

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Sensation

Process of activation of senses, perception: understanding sensations

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Light intensity

The color the eye sees depends on this

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<p>Cornea</p>

Cornea

This is a protective covering that helps focus light when it enters the eye

<p>This is a protective covering that helps focus light when it enters the eye</p>
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<p>Pupil</p>

Pupil

This part of the eye is like a camera shutter, and light enters it right after it goes through the cornea

<p>This part of the eye is like a camera shutter, and light enters it right after it goes through the cornea</p>
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<p>Iris</p>

Iris

This part of the eye is muscles that dilate or shrink depending on if there is more or less light

<p>This part of the eye is muscles that dilate or shrink depending on if there is more or less light</p>
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<p>Lens</p>

Lens

During the accommodation part of seeing, light is focused by this curved and flexible structure

<p>During the accommodation part of seeing, light is focused by this curved and flexible structure </p>
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<p>Retina</p>

Retina

Images are projected here, onto the back of the eye. It serves like a screen

<p>Images are projected here, onto the back of the eye. It serves like a screen</p>
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Cones

In the eye: first cell layer that is activated by color

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Rods

In the eye: first cell layer that is activated by black or white

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<p>Fovea</p>

Fovea

The very center of the retina: highest concentration of cones

Peripheral vision relies on rods and is black and white

<p>The very center of the retina: highest concentration of cones</p><p>Peripheral vision relies on rods and is black and white</p>
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Ganglion cells

The next layer of bipolar cells after rods and cones. Activated if enough rods and cones fire

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<p>Optic Chiasm</p>

Optic Chiasm

Where the parts of the optic nerve cross

<p>Where the parts of the optic nerve cross</p>
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<p>Blind Spot</p>

Blind Spot

Where the optic nerve leaves the retina (no rods or cones there)

<p><span>Where the optic nerve leaves the retina (no rods or cones there)</span></p>
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Trichromatic Theory

A theory of color vision:

(Oldest, simplest): 3 types of cones in the retina (blue, red, green) → activated in different combinations

  • Cannot explain afterimages (white / blank space shows opposite of previous color), and color blindness

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Dichromatic

This type of color blindness can’t see red/green or blue/yellow shades

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Monochromatic

This type of color blindness can only see in shades of gray

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Opponent-Process Theory

A theory of color vision:

Sensory receptors in retina come in red/green, blue/yellow, black/white (pairs)

  • If one sensor is stimulated → the other is inhibited from firing

  • Afterimages: if look at red: fatigue the real sensors → Switch gaze and the opposing ones fire with afterimage

    • Color blindness: if color sensors do not come in pairs or missing one pair

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Amplitude

Height of a sound wave. Th

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Frequency

The length of sound waves. Determines pitch of a sound (megahertz

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<p>Cochlea</p>

Cochlea

The fluid inside this structure is lined with a basilar membrane, and hair cells inside are connected to the organ of corti

<p>The fluid inside this structure is lined with a basilar membrane, and hair cells inside are connected to the <strong>organ of corti</strong></p>
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Place theory

A pitch theory:

Hair cells in the cochlea respond to different frequencies based on where they are located (some respond to high, some respond to low) and they move in different places

  • Accurately describes upper, but not lower pitches

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Frequency theory

A type of pitch theory:

 Lower tones are sensed by the rate at which cells fire → different firing rates = different frequencies

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Conduction Deafness

This type of deafness is when there is something wrong when conducting sound to the cochlea

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Nerve / Sensorineural Deafness

This type of deafness is when Hair cells in the cochlea are damaged (usually by loud noise)

  • Hair cells do not regenerate → much more difficult to treat

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Touch

This sense is activated when skin is indented or pierced and nerve endings respond to pressure or temperature

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Gate control theory

A theory that states that some pain messages have higher priority than others

  • A “gate” opens for higher priority but stays closed for lower priority pain, meaning that it is into felt

    • Endorphins swing the gate open/shut and control the amount of pain someone feels

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Papillae

Bumps on one’s tongue, inside of cheeks, and the roof of the mouth that hold taste buds, which absorb taste (chemicals)

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Olfactory bulb

This part in the smell / olfaction pathway gathers messages from the olfactory receptor cells and sends information to the brain

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Vestibular Sense

This body position sense tells one how the body is positioned in space

  • 3 semicircular canals in the inner ear give the brain feedback about body orientation (tubes with fluid)

  • When the position of the head changes, the fluid moves, causing the sensors to move and the hair cells activate the neurons to the brain

    • Nausea + Dizziness: When the liquid becomes agitated from too much movement

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Kinesthetic Sense

This body position sense gives feedback on the position and orientation of specific body parts

  • Receptors in muscles and joints send information to the brain about limbs 

  • Visual feedback helps also to keep track of the body

    • Provides feedback on where your body parts are in relation to other ones

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Absolute threshold

 Smallest amount of stimulus a person can detect 50% of the time

  • Stimuli below this are called subliminal

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Subliminal

Stimuli below the absolute threshold

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Difference threshold

How much a stimulus needs to change before a difference is noticed

  • Just-Noticeable Difference: Smallest amount of needed change

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Just-Noticeable Difference

The smallest amount of needed change to notice a difference

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Weber’s Law

 change needed is proportional to the original intensity of stimulus

  • More stimulus = more change is required to be noticed

    • Each sense varies by a constant (ie hearing is 5% (100 decibels need to change to 105 to be noticed. 8% for vision)

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Signal Detection Theory

A perceptual theory that states the following:

Effects of distractions and interference experienced when perceiving the world

  • Tries to predict what will be perceived when stimuli are competing → predict perceptual mistakes

  • False Positive: Think we perceive a stimulus that isn’t there (ex: think friend is there but it’s actually a stranger)

  • False Negative: Not perceiving a present stimulus (ex: not reading directions on a test)

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False Positive

False perception of an absent stimulus

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False negative

Not perceiving a present stimulus

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Top-Down Processing

This perceptual theory states the following:

Perceive by filling in gaps in what is sensed (like looking at clouds)

  • Experiences create schemata: mental representations on how we expect the world to be

  • Can create a perceptual set: predisposition to perceiving something in a certain way

  • * Use background knowledge (schemata) to perceive the missing information

  • Parent groups in the 1970s were concerned about backmasking: hidden messages in music played backwards

    • Expected to hear threatening message (schemata of evil music) which led them to hear false messages


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Schemata

mental representations on how we expect the world to be

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Perceptual Set

  • predisposition to perceiving something in a certain way

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Bottom-Up Processing / Feature Analysis

This perceptual theory states the following

Using only features of the object itself to build a complete perception

  • Start at the bottom with individual characteristics and put together into a final perception

  • Hard to imagine because it’s an automatic process

  • Feature detectors in the visual cortex perceive basic features (ines, curves, motion)

    • Mind builds a picture from bottom → up

    • Longer but more accurate

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Gestalt Rules

Principles that govern how people perceive groups of objects

  • Normally, images are perceived as groups instead of individual elements

  • Proximity: Objects close together -- likely a group

  • Similarity: : Objects similar in appearance -- likely a group

  • Continuity: Objects in a particular line or curve (trail or figure) -- group

Closure: Similar to top-down processing (objects making a recognizable image)

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Constancy

Ability to maintain a constant perception of an object despite changing angle or light

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Size Constancy

 objects closer to the eyes create a bigger image in the retina, however the human mind takes instance into account when estimating size

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Shape Constancy

 Objects from different angles look as if they are different shape. Mind knows that the shape is constant (depending on familiarity)

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Brightness Constancy

 Perceive objects as constant color even if the light and reflection changes


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Depth Cues

These help humans perceive the world in three dimnsions

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Stroboscopic Effect

 Movies and flipbooks → still images changing at a certain speed appear to be moving

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Phi Phenomenon

Holiday lights: series of lights turned on / off at a particular rate make it seem as if they are a moving singular light

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Autokinetic Effect

Spot of light projected in dark room → appears to move

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Visual Cliff Experiment

An experiment by Eleanor Gibson

 Do human infants perceive depth? 

  • Constructed a “cliff” covered with glass

    • Infant does not go off the visual cliff → meaning it can perceive depth (at 3 months old)

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Monocular Cues

These depth cues do not rely on someone having two eyes

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Binocular Cues

Depth Cues that rely on someone aving two eyes

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Convergence

  • As an object gets closure to the face, eyes move toward each other to keep focus 

    • The more the eyes converge, the closer the object is

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Extrasensory Perception / ESD

Claiming to perceive a sensation “outside” of normal senses

  • Psychologists are skeptical because no reliable evidence outside our 5 senses

  • Usually it’s explained by deception, magic tricks, or coincidence

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