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General Psychology

General Psychology. Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception. Sensation and Perception. Sensation – process of detecting external stimuli and changing those stimuli into nervous system activity Perception – cognitive process that involves the selection, organization, and interpretation of stimuli.

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General Psychology

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  1. General Psychology Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception

  2. Sensation and Perception • Sensation – process of detecting external stimuli and changing those stimuli into nervous system activity • Perception – cognitive process that involves the selection, organization, and interpretation of stimuli

  3. Concepts Related to Sensory Processes • Sensory threshold – minimum intensity of a stimulus that will cause the sense organs to operate • Psychophysics –study of relationships between the physical attributes of stimuli and psychological experiences they produce

  4. Figure 3.1: Examples of absolute threshold values for the five senses (i.e., these stimuli will be detected 50 percent of the time).

  5. Concepts Related to Sensory Processes • Absolute threshold – physical intensity of a stimulus that a person reports detecting 50% of the time • Used to see whether a person’s senses are operating properly

  6. Concepts Related to Sensory Processes • Signal detectiontheory – states that stimulus detection is a decision-making process of determining whether a signal exists against a background of noise

  7. Thresholds • Difference threshold – smallest difference between stimulus attributes that can be detected • Just noticeable difference (jnd) –amount of change in a stimulus that makes it just noticeably different from what it was

  8. Sensory Adaptation • Occurs when our sensory experience decreases with continued exposure to a stimulus • Dark adaptation – process in which the visual receptors become more sensitive to light as we spend time in the dark • Light adaptation – process by which our eyes become more sensitive to dark when we spend time in the light

  9. Figure 3.8: The dark adaptation curve.

  10. Light:Stimulus for Vision • Light – wave of electromagnetic energy • Wave amplitude – intensity or brightness of light • Wavelength – distance between any point in a wave and the corresponding point on next cycle (e.g., peak to peak), measured in nanometers (nm) • Determines the color or hue we perceive • Wave purity – refers to characteristic of saturation

  11. Figure 3.2: Representations of light waves differing in wavelength and wave amplitude.

  12. Figure 3.3: The visible spectrum, in which wavelengths of approximately 380-760 nanometers are visible to the human eye and are perceived as various hues.

  13. Figure 3.4: Relationships between physical characteristics of light and our psychological experience of that light.

  14. Figure 3.5: The major structures of the human eye.

  15. The Eye:Receptor for Vision • Cornea – outer shell of eye • Protects structures at front of eye • First point where light rays are bent • Pupil – opening through which light enters eye • Iris – colored part of the eye that expands or contracts, depending on light intensity • Ciliary muscles – expand or contract to change shape of the lens to bring image into focus (accommodation)

  16. Figure 3.6: The major features of the human retina.

  17. The Eye:Receptor for Vision • The eye is filled with two fluids: • Aqueous humor – provides nourishment to the cornea and other structures at the front of the eye • Vitreous humor – fills the interior of the eye, behind the lens, where it functions to keep the eyeball spherical

  18. Vision • Begins to take place at the retina, where light energy is transduced to neural energy Rods Photosensitive cells that are most active in low levels of illumination and do not respond differently to different wavelengths of light Cones Photosensitive cells that operate best at high levels of illumination and are responsible for color vision

  19. The Eye, Con’t. • Optic Nerve – formed of fibers from ganglion cells; leaves the eye and starts back toward other parts of the brain • Fovea – small area of retina with the best visual acuity. It is packed with cones cells (no rods!). • Blind spot – where nerve impulses from rods and cones leave the eye

  20. Figure 3.7: This figure provides two ways to locate your blind spot.

  21. Visual Pathway • Left visual field – everything off to your left ends up in right occipital lobe • Right visual field – everything off to your right ends up in left occipital lobe • Optic chiasma – sorting of which fibers of the optic nerve get directed where largely occurs here

  22. Figure 3.9: Cross Laterality.

  23. Color Vision • Trichromatic theory – First proposed by Thomas Young and revised by Herman von Helmholtz • The eye contains 3 distinct receptors for color • Each responds best to one of 3 primary colors of light: red, blue, and green • By the careful combination of all 3, all other colors can be produced

  24. Figure 3.10: The relative sensitivities of three types of cones to lights of differing wavelengths.

  25. Color Vision • Opponent-process theory – Ewald Hering proposed this theory in 1870 • Three pairs of visual mechanisms that respond to different wavelengths of light • Blue-yellow processor • Red-green processor • Black-white difference/brightness processor • Each is capable of responding to either of the two hues that give it its name, but not both

  26. Color Blindness • In dichromatism, there is a lack of one type of cone (supporting Young-Helmholtz’s theory) • However, color vision defects higher in the visual pathway support the opponent-process theory • Both theories are probably correct, each in its own way

  27. Gender Differences in Perception of Color? • Reliable, stable differences in color preferences: • Women prefer “cool colors,” while men prefer bright, strong colors • Women are more likely to have a favorite color • Women can name more colors • Color matters more to women.

  28. Sound: Stimulus for Hearing • Sound – series of pressures of air (or some other medium) beating against the ear • Amplitude – intensity that determines the psychological experience we call loudness • Zero point on decibel scale (perceived loudness) is lowest intensity of sound that can be detected – absolute threshold

  29. Figure 3.11: Sound waves are manifested as changes in air pressure are produced as the tines of the tuning fork vibrate back and forth.

  30. Sound, Con’t. • Frequency – number of waves exerted for every second of Unit of sound is called hertz (Hz) {20-20,000 Hz} • Pitch – how high or low a tone is (determined by wavelength) • Purity – timbre is character of sound that reflects degree of purity • White noise is a random mixture of sound frequencies

  31. Figure 3.12: Loudness values in decibel units for various sounds.

  32. Figure 3.13: A summary of the ways in which the physical characteristics of light and sound waves affect our psychological experiences of vision and hearing.

  33. Ear:Receptor for Hearing • Cochlea – major structure of inner ear • Receptor cells (transducers for hearing) are here • When fluid inside cochlea moves, basiliar membrane is bent up & down, which stimulates receptors (hair cells) • Neural impulses travel on auditory nerve toward temporal lobe

  34. Figure 3.14: The major structures of the human ear.

  35. Chemical Senses • Taste =gustation • Four psychological qualities: sweet, salty, sour, and bitter • Taste buds – receptor cells for taste on tongue • We have about 10,000 taste buds

  36. Figure 3.15: Enlarged view of a taste bud, the receptor for gustation.

  37. Chemical Sense, Con’t. • Smell = Olfaction • Pheromones – chemicals that many animals emit that produce distinctive odors that are used as a method of communication between organisms • VNO (vomeronasal organ) – primary organ used in detection of pheromones. Involved in mating, territoriality, and aggressiveness in animals.

  38. Figure 3.16: The olfactory system, showing its proximity to the brain and transducers for smell — the hair cells.

  39. The Skin-Cutaneous Senses • A square inch of skin contains nearly 20 million cells • Some skin receptor cells have free nerve endings, while others have encapsulated nerve endings • Our ability to discriminate among types of cutaneous sensation is due to a unique combination of responses the receptor cells have to various types of stimulation

  40. Figure 3.17: A patch of hairy skin, showing the layers of skin and several nerve cells.

  41. Figure 3.18: A demonstration that our sense of what is hot can be constructed from sensations of what is warm and cold.

  42. Vestibular Sense Tells us about balance, where we are in relation to gravity and about acceleration or deceleration Receptors are located on either side of the head, near the inner ear (5 chambers) Over-stimulation may result in motion sickness Kinesthetic sense Tells us about the position of various parts of our bodies and what our muscles and joints are doing Receptors are located primarily in our joints, but some information comes from muscles and tendons Information from these receptors travels via the spinal cord They provide examples of reflex reactions Position Senses

  43. A Special Sense:Pain Theories of pain: • Gate control mechanism (high in spinal cord) that opens to let pain messages race to brain or closes to block messages • Cognitive behavioral – pain is influenced by attitudes, expectations and behaviors

  44. Pain Management • Drug therapy • Hypnosis & cognitive self-control • Acupuncture • Placebo –a substance a person thinks will be helpful in treatment • Counterirritation – stimulating an area of the body near the location of the pain

  45. Paying Attention: A Process of Selection • Salient detail – one that captures our attention • Remembered better than peripheral details (which are part of the perceptual background) • Stimulus factors make some details more compelling than others • Personal factors – characteristics of a perceiver that influence which stimuli get attended to

  46. Stimulus Factors • Contrast –extent to which a stimulus is physically different from the other stimuli around it • Most important factor in perceptual selectivity • The more intense a stimulus is, the more likely we are to attend to it • Motion is another dimension for which contrast is important • Repetition can also influence attention

  47. Bottom-Up Processing Attend to a stimulus, organize and identify it, and then store it in memory Top-Down Processing Motivation, mental set, and past experience influence perceptual sensitivity Personal Factors in Processing

  48. Figure 3.19: How we perceive the world is determined at least in part by our mental set, or our expectations about the world.

  49. Gestalt Psychology • A gestaltforms when one sees the overall scheme of things: the whole, totality or configuration. • Gestalt Psychology – basic principle is figure-ground relationship • Of all the stimuli in your environment, those you attend to and group together are “figures” • All other stimuli become “ground”

  50. Figure 3.20: (A) A classic reversible figure-ground pattern.

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