psychology- visual perspective sac

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sensation

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sac 1 unit 2

40 Terms

1

sensation

passive process,occurs automatically raw sensory the feeling when u touch someone requires no thought process

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2

perception

active processes require thought processes psychological process

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3

within subject

Participants undergo all conditions repeated measures both experimental and controlled group

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4

between subjects

Participants are exposed to 1 of 2 groups (one group does something whilst other does not)

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5

mixed subjects

Repeated experiments combine features of both subject and within subject design.

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6

synaethesia

perceptual experience stimulation of sense that produces additional sensations in another (multiple types) its not a disease nor does it interfere with normal daily functioning

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7

visual illusions

perceptual distortions involving a mismatch between perceptual experience and physical reality

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8

perceptual distortions occuring consistently

everytime we see the same visual illusion we experience the same illusonary experience it occurs even when we are aware of illusion occuring

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9

muller lyer illusion

visual illusion in which one of two lines of equal length each of which have opposite shaped ends, is incorrectly perceived as being longer then the other

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10

perceptual sets

temporary readiness to perceive something in accordance to with what we expect it to be

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11

context (perceptual set)

refers to the setting or environment in which perception is made we often take into account the setting and pay attention to aspects that are more relevant

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12

Motivation (perceptual set)

refers to the process which activates and sustains purposeful or goal directed behaviour

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13

past experience (perceptual set)

refers to our personal experiences throughout our lives and includes everything we learned, intentionally or unintentionally Our visual perception relies heavily on past experiences, a crucial aspect of top-down processing

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14

gestalt principles

refers to ways in which we organise the features of a visual stimus by grouping them to perceive a whole,complete form.

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15

closure

perceptual tendency to mentally ‘close up’ or fill in or ignore gaps in a visual image and to perceive incomplete objects as complete (whole)

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16

similarity

involves the tendency to perceive parts of visual stimulus that has similar features (size,shape,colour) as belonging together in a group

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17

proximity

perceives parts of visual image which are positioned close together as belonging to one group (series of letters located close interpreted as one word)

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18

figure &ground

when we use figure ground we organise visual info by dividing stimulus into a figure, which stands out from the background.

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19

continuation

most likely to see continuous and smooth lines rather then broke and jagged ones

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20

top down processing

perception begins at top higher thinking levels and then works down from whole to details (past knowledge of image)

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21

bottom up processing

the perceptual process begins from bottom with ‘raw sensory info’ that is sent up to brain for higher level of mental processing.

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22

perceptual distortion is unaffected by prior knowledge that its an illusion

the illusory experience occurs even when we know we are looking at the visual illusion

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23

perceptual distortion is unaffected by the prior understanding of why it occurs

misinterpretation happens even when we are aware of the reason/theory as to how the illusion occurs

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24

sustained attention

involves maintance of attention on a specific stimulus or task for a continious period of time without being distracted

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25

divided attention

refers to ability to distribute our attention so that two or more activities may be performed simultaneously

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26

selective attention

involves choosing and attending to a specific stimulus whilst at same time excluding other stimuli

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27

social factors

culture as an influence-and involves individuals external environment and surroundings that can influence how people perceive visual stimuli.

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28

biological factors

factors that influence visual perception

(depth cues,binocular and monocular etc)

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29

psychological factors

describe how mental processes influence visual perception

(gestalt principles)

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30

spatial neglect

A neurological disorder where individuals cannot notice anything on their left or right side (despite their sense functioning normally)

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31

list monocular depth cues

accomidation,height in visual field, texture gradient, relative size, interpostion,linear perspective

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32

list binocular dept cues

retina disparity,convergence

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33

raw sensory data

the process by which sensory receptors sense organs and detect and respond to sensory information that stimulates them.

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34

perceptual set

temporary readiness to perceive something in accordance with what we expect it to be. (past experience,context,memory and motivation) more likely to interpret the event in a predetermined way

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35

extraneous variables

variables not investigated that can affect the overall result

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36

within subject

also called repeated measure each participant is in both the experimental and control groups

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37

between subject

1 of 2 groups (one group drinks coffee, the other doesn't) is randomly allocated

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38

mixed subject

combines features of both between and within subject design repeated measures no disadvanatage

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39

memory(perceptual set)

visual perception is the process of interpreting what we see in a meaningful way. Memory is the process of storing and retrieving this perceived information.

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40

memory top down processing

Visual perception of objects and scenes through top down processing of sensory information is initially compared with those stored in memory. in attempt to find a match

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