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Chapter 4 Module 10. Perception. Perception. The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information. Do you favour one sense over the other? Which is your strongest sense? How do you know?. Gestalt.
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Chapter 4 Module 10 Perception
Perception • The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information. • Do you favour one sense over the other? • Which is your strongest sense? How do you know?
Gestalt • Gestalt psychologists believed that by breaking experiences into basic parts had something that was lost. Gestalt or whole organizes patterns that allows us to understand the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. • We don’t focus on discrete individual stimuli but rather group them together in meaningful units.
Jig saw activity • Break into groups • Each group is assigned either figure and ground, similarity, proximity, closure or continuity. • In your groups explain what these concepts are • And how these concepts fit into the concept of Gestalt. • Present
Depth Perception • The ability to see in three dimensions and judge distance. • Why is this important in our lives? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNmEUhvFxtM
Is depth perception nature or nurture? • Gibson and Walk explored this using a visual cliff which ensures the infant’s safety while allowing the researchers to determine if the infant can perceive depth.
Results? • Infants were reluctant to crawl to the edge. So this ability may be in some ways nature. But by the time they can crawl they have learned (nurtured) so as to avoid obstacles.
Depth • Read pg. 187 and 188 • Describe the two major binocular depth cues and how they help us perceive depth: a) retinal disparity and b) convergence.
What did you see? • Without binocular vision there can be no sausage. Note that when you alternately close one eye then the other the gap jumps. It’s your brain’s attempt to combine these two views that creates the view in the first place.
Retinal Disparity • Roll a sheet of paper into a tube raise it to your eye and look through it. Open your hand next to the tube and try to have the spot go through your hand.
Convergence • Write this down • A binocular depth cue related to the tension in the eye muscles when the eyes track inward to focus on objects close to the viewer. • Can you see the 3d image on pg. 189?
Monocular • People who loose vision in one eye cannot use retinal disparity. But they can calculate depth by means of monocular cues. • The same way a painter can trick our 2 dimensional retinas into seeing three dimensions on canvas
Monocular • Read 189-192 and answer this question • Describe the following monocular depth cues and how they influence our perception: a) relative size; b) relative motion; c) interposition; d) relative height; e) texture gradient; f) relative clarity; g) linear perspective.
Motion • We can perceive motion even when something is not moving. • Stare straight ahead. Put your finger out to the side so you can’t see it. Wiggle your finger. Can you see it now? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTcZjl4peO0&feature=related
Stroboscopic motion • Series of still images that when moved create the appearance of motion. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSzCLf8tjP4
Phi Phenomenon • Illusion of movement when lights are turned on and off. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2-swEdDXsc
Perceptual Constancy • Things will remain constant despite changes in the distance, angle of view or level of light. • Three types • Size • Shape and Light
Size Constancy • Put your left finger up and look at it. While fixed on it move your right hand forwards and backwards to your face. • Your right hand should be getting larger and smaller. • Size remains constant.Our knowledge of the world leads us to conclude that when the apparent size of an object changes the actual size does not change.
Size Constancy • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ttd0YjXF0no
Shape Constancy • An objects shape • has not changed • even though our • angle indicates it • has.
Lightness • The ability to see an object as having a constant level of lightness now matter how the conditions change.
Answer • Read pg. 194-195 • Explain the concept of perceptual constancy as it relates to size, shape and color and brightness.
Perceptual Set • The power of suggestion
Answer • Read pg. 196 • Define perceptual set and give some examples of how this mindset affects our interpretation of everyday experiences.
Context • How we percieve the • Coke bottle is in the • Context in which • We view it.
Answer on pg. 197 • How does context influence perception?
Illusions • We are tricked • into • misunderstanding • stimuli
Pg. 199 - 200 • Describe the following illusions: • a) the Muller-Lyer illusion; • b) the Ames room illusion.
Muller Lyer • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TITFtgH_TcA • Ames room again • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOeo8zMBfTA
Self test answers • Multiple Choice • 1-A, 2-D, 3-A, 4-A,5-D, 6-B • Matching • A-4, B-11, C-6, D-8, E-5, F-3, G-2, H-1, I-9 • Fill in the blank • 8. Perception, 9. Bottom up, top down, 10. Perceptual constancy
Essay • Understand that Gestalt psychology tried to encourage psychologists to look at how people perceive the world rather than at their individual behaviours, They delved into why and how people perceived sensory phenomena to understand people’s behavior. Wundt analyzed how people react to stimuli, not why. Gestalt psychologists wanted to know how different stimuli can produce both similar and different behaviours.