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Sensation and Perception. What is Sensation??. There are sense receptors for smell, temperature, vision, hearing, and taste. When the sense receptors detect an appropriate stimulus they convert the energy of the stimulus into electrical impulses that travel through neurons to the brain.
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What is Sensation?? There are sense receptors for smell, temperature, vision, hearing, and taste When the sense receptors detect an appropriate stimulus they convert the energy of the stimulus into electrical impulses that travel through neurons to the brain.
What is Perception? It is a set of mental operations that gives organization changes the sensory impulses into meaningful patterns.
What are the receptor cells for each of the Senses? • Vision- Rods and cones in the eye • Hearing-The hair cells in the inner ear. • Smell-The receptor cells in the nose. • Taste-The taste buds in the tongue. • Touch-Nerve endings in the skin.
Absolute Thresholds Defined as the weakest amount of stimuli that can be sensed. Vision-A candle flame viewed from 30 miles on a dark night Hearing-The ticking of a watch 20 feet away. Smell-One drop of perfume in a small house. Taste-One teaspoon of sugar dissolved in 2 gallons of water. Touch-The wing of a fly falling on a cheek.
Difference Thresholds? Defined as The minimum amount of difference that can be detected between two stimuli.
Related Terms Afterimage Is a color’s complimentary color The Blind Spot The point where the optic nerve leaves the eye and where there is no vision .
The sense of taste or gustation is activated by receptors called taste buds. Each bud has approximately 50 receptor cells. The basic tastes are sweet, sour, salty, and bitter. In some cultures, umami is considered to be a sixth taste. It is the taste of monosodium glutamate. Flavor is an interaction between taste and smell. The Structure of the Tongue
Perception • Influences would include… • Bottom-Up Processing • Small components are combined until a complete perception is formed. • Top-Down Processing • Past experiences and knowledge are used to recognize the and identify the simpler elements of the whole figure. • Perceptual set • An expectation of what will be perceived.
Gestalt Organizing Principles • Figure-ground • Similarity • Proximity • Continuity • Closure
Perceptual Constancies • Shape Constancy • Size Constancy • Brightness Constancy
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Depth Perception • The ability to see the world in three dimensions • Binocular Depth cues such as convergence and binocular disparity
Depth Perception • Monocular Perception • Interposition • Linear perspective • Relative Size • Texture Gradient • Shadows and shading • Motion parallax
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