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3830404
Sensation & Perception
Description
Chapter 4 Psychology 104 Concept Map Sensation & Perception
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psychology
chapter 4
sensation
perception
Mind Map by
Jessica Auger
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Created by
Jessica Auger
about 9 years ago
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Resource summary
Sensation & Perception
Psychophysics
Just Noticeable Difference (JND)
Weber's Law
Size of a JND is a constant proportion of the size of initial stimilus
1/3 for weight & pain
1/60 for vision
1/10 for hearing
Different fractions apply to different types
Fechner's Law
The amount of sensory experience is proportional to # of JND's
Stimilus is above absolute threshold
Same amount of increase in stimilus
Brings smaller increases in perceived increase
light
sound
Threshold
The diving point between energy levels
That do & do not have a detectable effect
Absolute Threshold
Input is the minimum amount of stimulation that an organism can detect
Stimulus Intensity
Increase
Subjects probability of responding increases
Detected 50% of the time
Define the boundaries
of an organism's sensory capabilities
The study of how physical stimuli are translated into psychological experience
Sensory Adaption
Gradual decline in sensitivity due to prolonged stimulation
Pervasive aspect of everyday life
Built-in Process
Sensory Input
Keeps people tuned in to changes
Rather than constants
Ignore the obvious
Focuses on changes
Vision
Eye
Lens
Behind the Iris
Transparent eye structure
Focuses light rays
That fall on the Retina
Made up of soft tissue
Capable of adjustments
Accomodation
Occurs when curvature of the lens adjusts to visual focus
Lens of eye gets fatter
To give Clearer Image
Pupil
opening in center of Iris
regulate amount of light passing into rear chamber of eye
Constricts
lets LESS light in
sharpens the image
Dilates
lets light in
Image is LESS sharp
Saccades
Constant Motion
eyes constantly scan environment
making brief fixations
Essential to good vision
Retina
Neural tissue lining the inside of the back surface of eye
absorbs light, processes images, sends info to brain
Optic Disk
Hole in the retina where optic nerve fibres exit the eye
Cones
Visual receptors
Key role in daylight vision
Key role in color vision
Do not respond well
to dim light
Provide better visual acuity
sharpness
precise detail
Fovea
Tiny spot in Center of Retina
Contains only cones
Visual acuity is BEST at this spot
Rods
Visual Receptors
Key Role
Night Vision
Peripheral Vision
Light Adaption
Light
Less Sensitive
To Light in High illumination
Dark
More Sensitive
To light in LOW illumination
Brain
Info. Processing
Receptive Field of a visual cell
Retinal Area
When stimulated affects the firing of cell
Optic Nerve
Collection of axons
Connect the eye with the brain
Center-Surround Arrangement
Center being excitatory
Surround inhibitory
or vice versa
Allows us to see edges clearly
Optic Nerve
Divided
Optic Chasm
Optic Nerve crosses here
half of each eye
left side of each eye goes to left brain
Goes to other side of brain
VISUAL CORTEX
Simple Cells
Respond to
Certain witdth
angle
position
in receptive field
Complex Cells
any position
Certain Width
Angle
SOME ONLY RESPOND TO A LINE MOVING IN A CERTAIN DIRECTION
CELLS IN THE CORTEX ARE HIGHLY SPECIALIZED
Known as FEATURE DECTECTORS
Neurons that respond only to specific features
of more complex stimuli
VISUAL AGNOSIA
inability to recognize objects
PROSOPAGNOSIA
inability to recognize familiar faces
Color Vision
Trichromatic Theory
Hermann von Helmholtz (1852)
Human eye has 3 types of receptors
Differing sensitivities to diff. Light Wavelengths
Red
Blue
Green
tv works this way
Color Blindness
Occurs more frequently in MALES
Dichromats
They only see with 2 channels
Lack red, green or blue channel
rare to not have blue working
SUPPORTS TRICHROMATIC THEORY
Hard to distinguish
green from red
yellow from blue
Opponent Process Theory
Complementary Colours
pairs of colours
produce gray tone when mixed
Afterimage
Image persists after stimulus is removed
Trichromatic Theory CAN'T account for afterimage effect
Ewald Hering (1878)
Color Perception depends on receptors
Opposite Responses to 3 pairs of colours
blue/yellow
red/green
black/white
also colors of afterimages
WE NEED BOTH THEORIES TO EXPLAIN COLOR VISION
RETINA HAS 3 TYPES OF CONES
red
blue
green
Processing
Top-Down
like reversible figures
when we perceive a word
before we know all the letters
Bottom-Up
Used in feature Analysis
starts at parts and builds towards the whole
Hearing
Properties of Sound
Wavelength/Frequency - PITCH
Measured in HERTZ (HZ)
Humans only hear 20-20,000 Hz
usually 2000-4000
Wave Amplitude
quality of loudness
Measured in Decibels (dB)
Painful after 120 dB
Wave purity/mixture
Timbre
Complexity of sound wave
Purest sound has only one frequency of vibration
Auditory Perception they INFLUENCE
Place Theory
Hermann von Helmholtz (1863)
proposed place theory of pitch
Spiral Cochlea
Basilar Membrane
Hair Cells
Auditory Receptors
Frequency Theory
Entire Basilar Membrane
Vibrates at different frequencies
Auditory nerve fibres
fire at different rates
Letting brain know pitch of sound
George von Bekesy (1947)
sound travels in waves
Peak in a certain place depending on frequency
Builds on PLACE THEORY
How it processes
Basilar Membrane
runs length of cochlea
Hair Cells
Stimulated by waves of fluid
The Other Senses
Taste
Gustatory Receptors
Taste Buds
line the trenches around tiny bumps
called papillae
FOUR MAIN TASTES
Sweet
Babies like sweet
Sour
Bitter
Salty
Most taste Preferences are learned
SUPER tasters
4 times as many taste buds
women
DISLIKE
Sweets
Veggies
alcohol
smoking
high fat foods
If a person lacks smell taste will be affected
Smell
Receptors
Olfactory Cilia
Hairlike structures
In upper portion of nasal passages
Axons that Synapse with cells
In olfactory bulb
base of brain
10,000 different odors
Pheremones
Chemical Messages
Linked to sexual attraction
send from one member of species to another
Touch
Sensing Pressure
Nerve Fibres
Carry messages from outside world
To spinal cord
To brain stem
go to opposite side of brain
Signals pass through THALAMUS
To Somatosensory cortex
Parietal Lobe
Pain
Pathways
Fast
Uses myelinated neurons
Registers pain in a second
Slow
Unmyelinated Neurons
Less localized, longer aches
Burning pain comes later
Gate Control Theory
Incoming Pain
passes through process
in spinal cord
can be closed by skin receptor signals
Can be closed by brain receptor signals
Sensation
The stimulation of sense organs
Perception
The selection, organization, & interpretation
of Sensory Input
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