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What You See Is What You’ve Learned. Addison Leong. A Little Background. Sensation refers to the information you are constantly receiving from your environment. Perception refers to the ways in which the brain manipulates this information: Select the sensation to focus on
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What You See Is What You’ve Learned Addison Leong
A Little Background • Sensation refers to the information you are constantly receiving from your environment • Perception refers to the ways in which the brain manipulates this information: • Select the sensation to focus on • Organize the information into recognition • Interpret the organized information
The Method • Colin Turnbull, anthropologist who published the study, used naturalistic observation • Over the course of a day, Turnbull brought a Pygmy named Kenge out of the forest (the Inturi Forest in Zaire) that he had never left • Because of the forest, Kenge had never seen far distances before.
Findings • Note nature-nurture • Suggests that environment, or nurture, contributes to perceptual development • Later kitten experiment by Blakemore and Cooper (1970) • There is no particular source of our perceptual abilities
Issues • Conclusion is based on only one case study • Cannot tell whether study results are universally applicable • Turnbull had no hypotheses, clear scientific method, and was not even a psychologist
That’s All, Folks! Remember: Don’t keep children in the dark. It makes them think that cows a mile away are insects.