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Perception: . Organization and Interpretation. Perception is…. Our way of selecting, organizing, and interpreting our sensations. Perception blends with Sensation into one continuous process to help us represent the world in our heads. Perceptual Organization. Gestalt
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Perception: Organization and Interpretation
Perception is… • Our way of selecting, organizing, and interpreting our sensations. • Perception blends with Sensation into one continuous process to help us represent the world in our heads.
Perceptual Organization • Gestalt • We organize our sensations into a whole rather than see it parts. • Necker Cube • Types of Perceptions: form, depth, motion, constancy.
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Necker Cube A simple 3D figure, but a complex arrangement of lines in 2D. The 3D interpretation prevails in perceptual organization.
Form • Figure and ground • Grouping
Form: Figure and Ground • Reversible, always organize the stimulus into a figure seen against a ground. • Figure - the object of interest • Ground - the background
Form: Grouping • The perceived whole is different from it parts. • Helps us to construct a reality. • Factors that come into play when grouping: • Closeness (_____________________) • Sameness (_____________________) • Ongoing (_______________________) • Linked (_________________________) • Complete (______________________)
Depth Perception • Two dimensional images are projected onto the retina. • DP is our ability to see things is three dimensions using depth cues: • Binocular cues • Monocular cues
Depth Perception:Binocular Clues • Eyes are ~2 1/2 inches apart. • Our eyes get different images of the world. • The larger the angle, the nearer the object. • See next slide • Convergence • Retinal Disparity
Depth Perception:Monocular Cues • We rely on these to gauge depth and distance. • Relative size • Interposition • Relative Clarity • Texture Gradient • Relative height • Relative motion • Linear perspective • Lights and shadows • Find an example of one of these now….. • Page 235 in textbook
Motion • Stroboscopic motion • Phi phenomenon • Motion after effect
Perceptual Constancy • Enables us to perceive an object as unchanging regardless of changes in the stimulus we receive. • Impt examples: Muller-Lyer; Ponzo
Muller-Lyer Illusion • The top horizontal line looks longer because it also looks farther away. • The inward pointing arrows signify that the horizontal line is closest to you, and the outward pointing arrows signify the opposite case.
Ponzo Illusion • Converging lines indicate that top line is farther away than bottom line
What effects our perceptions? • Deprivation • Adaptation • Set • Context • 10-11 exercise • Sine wave Speech
Fraser Spiral • http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/ang_fraser/index.html
Deprivation • Critical period- that optimal time period after birth when certain events must take place for normal development. • Use it “soon” or lose it. • Cat example
Adaptation • We can become “biperceptual” • Bilinguals- can switch back to native/new language at will. • Adaptation is difficult at first, but can happen with no apparent recourse for previous perceptions.
Perceptual Set • A mental predisposition that influences what we perceive. • Influences include schemas, past experiences, stereotypes. • Context • Top-down influences our bottom-up.
Perceptual Set • Call out the number that follows each of these…. • Pronounce the words that I am about to spell • Provide punctuation to make these words meaningful. • The telephone game. • Just for fun