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Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception


  • Sensation

    • The process of receiving stimulus and energies from the external environment and transforming those energies into neutral energies

  • Perception

    • The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information so that it makes sense


Types of Processing-

  • Bottom-up

    • The operations in S and P in which sensory receptors register info about the external environment and send it up to the brain for interpretation

    • Data-driven

    • Focus on incoming data

    • It takes place in real-time

  • Top-down

    • The operation in S and P is launched by cognitive processing at the brain's high levels that allow the organism to sense what's happening and to apply that framework info to the world

    • Rely on contextual cues to interpret info

    • Use previous experience and expectations as cues


What's the Process?

  • Reception

    • The stimulation of the sensory receptor cells by energy (sound, light, heat, etc.)

    • Psychophysics- the study of the psychological effect of the forms of energy

  • Transduction

    • Transforming this cell stimulation into neural impulses

  • Transmission

    • Delivering this neural information to the brain to be processed


Thresholds

  • Absolute threshold

    • The minimum level of stimulus intensity needed to detect a stimulus half the time

    • Anything below this threshold is considered subliminal

  • Signal detection theory- whether or not we detect a stimulus, especially amidst background noises

    • It depends not just on the intensity of the stimulus but also on psychological factors

  • Subliminal Detection

    • Below our threshold for being able to detect a stimulus consciously

  • Just noticeable difference

    • The minimum difference (color, pitch, weight, temp., etc.) for a person to detect the difference half the time

      • Weber's Law- for two stimuli to be perceived as different we must differ by a minimum percentage

        • Weight= 2%

        • Light intensity= 8%

        • Sound = 0.3% frequency

  • Sensory adaption

    • To help detect more novel stimuli in our environment, our senses will tune out constant stimuli

      • When you switch your phone from one pocket to the other do you feel it?

      • The brain wants to focus on one sensation at a time

  • Perceptual set

    • When what we EXPECT to see influences what we DO see

  • Context effect on perception

    • Double pair apple pear payee payor


The Effect of emotion, psychical state, and motivation on perception

  • Experiments have shown that

    • Destinations appear to be farther when your tired

    • Targets look farther when your cross bow is heavier

    • A hill looks steeper with a heavy backpack, or listening to sad music, or being alone

JC

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception


  • Sensation

    • The process of receiving stimulus and energies from the external environment and transforming those energies into neutral energies

  • Perception

    • The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information so that it makes sense


Types of Processing-

  • Bottom-up

    • The operations in S and P in which sensory receptors register info about the external environment and send it up to the brain for interpretation

    • Data-driven

    • Focus on incoming data

    • It takes place in real-time

  • Top-down

    • The operation in S and P is launched by cognitive processing at the brain's high levels that allow the organism to sense what's happening and to apply that framework info to the world

    • Rely on contextual cues to interpret info

    • Use previous experience and expectations as cues


What's the Process?

  • Reception

    • The stimulation of the sensory receptor cells by energy (sound, light, heat, etc.)

    • Psychophysics- the study of the psychological effect of the forms of energy

  • Transduction

    • Transforming this cell stimulation into neural impulses

  • Transmission

    • Delivering this neural information to the brain to be processed


Thresholds

  • Absolute threshold

    • The minimum level of stimulus intensity needed to detect a stimulus half the time

    • Anything below this threshold is considered subliminal

  • Signal detection theory- whether or not we detect a stimulus, especially amidst background noises

    • It depends not just on the intensity of the stimulus but also on psychological factors

  • Subliminal Detection

    • Below our threshold for being able to detect a stimulus consciously

  • Just noticeable difference

    • The minimum difference (color, pitch, weight, temp., etc.) for a person to detect the difference half the time

      • Weber's Law- for two stimuli to be perceived as different we must differ by a minimum percentage

        • Weight= 2%

        • Light intensity= 8%

        • Sound = 0.3% frequency

  • Sensory adaption

    • To help detect more novel stimuli in our environment, our senses will tune out constant stimuli

      • When you switch your phone from one pocket to the other do you feel it?

      • The brain wants to focus on one sensation at a time

  • Perceptual set

    • When what we EXPECT to see influences what we DO see

  • Context effect on perception

    • Double pair apple pear payee payor


The Effect of emotion, psychical state, and motivation on perception

  • Experiments have shown that

    • Destinations appear to be farther when your tired

    • Targets look farther when your cross bow is heavier

    • A hill looks steeper with a heavy backpack, or listening to sad music, or being alone