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Sensory Perception

“It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.” Henry David Thoreau. Sensory Perception. “The Blind Men and the Elephant” by John Godfrey Saxe (Indian Legend, metaphor, genius.) Beau Lotto: Optical Illusions. Define sensory perception:

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Sensory Perception

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  1. “It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.” Henry David Thoreau Sensory Perception

  2. “The Blind Men and the Elephant” by John Godfrey Saxe (Indian Legend, metaphor, genius.) Beau Lotto: Optical Illusions

  3. Define sensory perception: • the awareness of things through our 5 senses. • The response of our senses to stimuli • Sensation + Interpretation = Perception Parameters

  4. See page 98 of your books: The tree in the forest example… Does “sound” only exist if we are there to hear it? Or does sound exist outside of experience? (see blog!) http://frizzelltok.blogspot.com Connect to language: definition theory

  5. Empiricism: a school of philosophy in which ALL knowledge is based in sensory perception/experience. New blog asks you to think of living for one year without each sense; what would you miss most?

  6. Daniel Tammet: Born on a Blue Day(Author) Daniel Tammet has a rare form of autism which pairs with synesthesia, meaning, he sees numbers in color and texture, thereby allowing him to remember and relate numbers in an extraordinary fashion. Can it be? Oddities of sense perception

  7. EE: Topics due Friday. Questions? See Ms. Cordell ASAP! If you missed Monday, you should have already met with Ms. Cordell to get the information! LANGUAGE QUIZ—Make up is today @ 2:00. 2/28 Announcements

  8. Esref was born blind. How then, can he paint with such stunning accuracy…without help? EsrefArmagan

  9. Imagine creating this piece of music…if you were deaf! Beethoven: Deaf Composer

  10. What do you think of the statement, “Your perception is your reality”? Can you think of examples where this is true and not true? Are there any areas of knowledge that do not rely in some way on sensory perception? In what ways is perception ambiguous? Some questions

  11. COMMON SENSE REALISM: perception is straight-forward and an accurate reflection of reality. “Our conscious world is a grand illusion!” (this statement based in the fact that our interpretation of sensations is dependent on our brains) see pg. 23 of packet. “The tickle is not in the feather” says Galileo.

  12. Context, figure and ground, visual grouping… Illusions Gestalt theory: we tend to perceive things in meaningful patterns or groups rather than separate parts.

  13. http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/02/11/171409656/why-even-radiologists-can-miss-a-gorilla-hiding-in-plain-sighthttp://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/02/11/171409656/why-even-radiologists-can-miss-a-gorilla-hiding-in-plain-sight And expectation…in real life!

  14. Example 1: Example 2: Example 3: Example 4: Example 5: Example 6: What sounds tell us…(Freeze this screen!)

  15. What role does instinct play in what we perceive? To what extent does culture affect the ways in which we see the world? How does your emotional state affect your perception? Some more questions

  16. Where does “confirmation bias” become a problem of knowledge in sensory perception?

  17. 13 out of 23 people turned in their Extended Essay paper to Ms. Cordell or myself. Tsk tsk. 3/4/13

  18. Law-school example Scott Fraser: Why Eyewitnesses get it Wrong Getting it Right: Eyewitness Testimony (The innocence project) Eye-witness testimony

  19. Misinterpretations/Misremember Emotional/memory connection distortion Failure to notice something. Some things lie beyond our sensory perception abilities. Paris in the the spring Problems with sensory perception

  20. Confirmation by another sense Coherence (does it fit in with our overall experience of the world?) Be careful not to be TOO skeptical! Sensory perception does have its weaknesses, but in most cases it is considered reliable enough to base knowledge claims on. Testing for reality

  21. Common sense realism: the way we see it is the way it is. • Scientific realism: the world exists in an independent reality; our brains make sense of chaos. (Atoms whizzing around….we make them into a sofa with our minds). • Phenomenalism: matter is the permanent possibility of sensation; the world does not exist beyond our experience of it. Reality is not for us to determine because we are too limited by our individual experiences. • “To be is to be perceived”—George Berkeley Theories of reality

  22. How do you see sensory confirmation or distortion as playing a part in the topics you presented for Language? How about the 2 minute presentations you did a few weeks ago? Ethics: do good people see the world differently than bad people? How does connotation in language relate to sensory perception? Connect

  23. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csrPT9ClVUc Sensory in the media

  24. Rose Colored Glasses • Your own ranking • Can you apply these tests • Confirmation by another sense • Coherence (does it fit in with our overall experience of the world?) • What contributes to self-perception? Is it more faulty that the “five senses” ways of perceiving? Is self perception perhaps the grandest illusion of them all? Self-perception

  25. The statements involving others are scored lower or more harshly. The statements involving something negative are more conservative. The statements involving traits our society values we tend to rank highly. The ones where we are asked about the perception others have of us are higher. Humility is valued in our culture, which can tend to reign you in. Depending on the wording, we change our perception. (I am often misunderstood vs. I am a good communicator) Is this true?

  26. List all of the things that have been invented to enhance our sensory perception. List the corresponding sense this invention enhances. Do these enhancements help us or handicap us? Sensory enhancement

  27. Perception is an important part of how we know what we know. Perception is fallible and sometimes subjective and selective. Errors in perception can have real-life consequences. The structure of our sense organs affects how we perceive the world. Pain, taste, color, sound are subjective (relativism). We can hypothesize that the world exists external of our experiences, based on regularity of experience, evidence, and coherence. Human beings invent things to enhance our sense perception. Conclusions

  28. Do you consider the following sense perceptions? Intuition Instinct Memory Compassion/Empathy

  29. Allegory of the Cave-- Sensory perception in metaphor

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