Sensation Outline Chapter 5, Psychology, David G Meyers, 7 th Edition

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Sensation Outline Chapter 5, Psychology, David G Meyers, 7 th Edition"

Transcription

1 Sensation Outline Chapter 5, Psychology, David G Meyers, 7 th Edition Sensation the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment Perception the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events Sensation and Perception blend into one continuous process Bottom-Up Processing sensory analysis that starts at the entry level Top-Down Processing higher level analysis; construct perception by drawing on our experiences and expectations Failure of perception can take place anywhere between sensory detection and perceptual interpretation o Prosopagnosia condition involving complete sensation but incomplete perception. Loss of temporal lobe We only detect a small amount of the senses in the world Psychophysics study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli, such as their intensity and our psychological experience of them Absolute Threshold The minimum stimulation necessary to detect a particular stimulus; Measured by recording the stimulation required for us to detect 50% of the time. Signal Detection Theory a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus [signal] amid background stimulation [noise] Assumes that there is no single absolute threshold and that detection depends partly on a persons experience, expectations, motivation, and level of fatigue Responsiveness increases when life or death on on the line (war situation) Peoples responsiveness decrease after 30 minutes of judging when a faint signal occurs Subliminal below ones absolute threshold for conscious awareness Yes, subliminal stimulus affects us Many experiments test by flashing positive or negative images before the group would respond to a stimuli; correlation between the subliminal and their reaction Although we can be affected by subliminal sensation, we cannot be influenced, or manipulated by hidden persuasion advertising. CBC study flashing message telephone now 352 times had no positive marketing affect. Difference Threshold or Just Noticeable Difference [JND] The minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the time. We experience the difference threshold as a just noticeable difference Increases with magnitude of the stimulus

2 Weber s Law The principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount) o Light = 8% o Weight = 2% o Frequency = 0.3% Rough approximation, works well for non-extreme sensory stimuli Sensory Adaption our diminished/diminishing sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus Our eyes are constantly moving, quivering to maintain retinal stimulation Reduces our sensitivity, enables us to focus on informative changes in our environment o Frees our attention for more important things - Vision - Transduction conversion of one form of energy into another In sensation: the transforming of stimulus energies into neural impulses What we experience as color is really pulses of electromagnetic energy [Small part of electromagnetic radiation] Wavelength the distance from one wave peak to the next Electromagnetic wavelengths vary from the short blips of cosmic rays to the long pulses of radio transmission Wavelength determines a lights hue Hue The color we experience from a light Intensity The amount of energy in a light or sound wave We perceive as brightness or loudness Determined by waves amplitude (height) Light enters the eye through the cornea Cornea protects the eye and bends light to provide focus Light passes through the pupil Pupil small adjustable opening through which light enters Iris muscle that controls the size of the pupil, this how much light is let in Ring of muscle that forms the colored portion of the eye Dilates and constricts in response to light intensity and inner emotions Subtly dilates to signal sexual interest Lens the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus the image on the retina Accommodation the process by which the eye s lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina. Changes curvature Retina The light sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the processing of visual information Multilayered tissue Gets an inverted picture of what we see

3 Light image broken down into neural impulses, brain processes info and changes to upright orientation at the optical chasm Acuity the sharpness of vision; can be affected by small distortions in shape of eye Nearsightedness misshapen eyeball focuses light rays from distant objects in the front of the retina. Nearby objects are seen more clearly than distant objects Farsightedness faraway objects are seem more clearly than near objects Image focused behind the retina - The Retina - Light goes through outer cells before it reaches buried receptor cells, rods and cones Triggers chemical changes that generate neural signals Signals activate bipolar cells, which activate ganglion cells Rods retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray Necessary for peripheral and twilight vision times when cones don t respond Cones receptor cells concentrated near the center of the retina Function in daylight and well-lit conditions Detect fine detail and color sensations Axons from ganglion cells from the Optic Nerve Optic Nerve nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain Blind Spot the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a blind spot because no receptor cells are located there. Fovea the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye s cones cluster Cones have their own bipolar cell, relaying their precise info to the brain Processed in the occipital lobe the visual cortex at the back of the brain Feature Detectors nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus such as shape, angle, or movement. Facial recognition comes from the temporal lobe Parallel Processing processing of several aspects of a problem simultaneously The brains natural mode of information processing for many functions Contrasts with step-by-step (serial) processing Damage to a portion of the visual cortex resulting in blindness in part of the field of vision is called blindsight - Color - Things appear a color because they reject the wavelength of the color they appear Wavelength determines color

4 Young Helmholtz Trichromatic (three-color) Theory Retina contains 3 different color receptors; for red, blue, and green When stimulated in combination can produce perception of any color Subtractive Color Mixing subtracts wavelengths from the reflected light o Mixed colors result in no wavelength left (brown/black) Additive Color Mixing adds wavelength, thus increasing light. Combining red, blue, and green equals white light Color blind people lack functioning cones Hering discovered afterimages Opponent-Process Theory the theory that opposing retinal processes enable color vision. For example, some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green On Yellow Red Black Off Blue Green White If you detect one color you cannot detect the other Color Constancy perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object We see color because of our brains computations of the light reflected by any object relative to its surrounding objects. - Hearing - Audition the sense of hearing Hear frequencies that correspond to the range of the human voice Brief changes in air pressure transform into neural impulses that our brain interprets as sound Frequency The number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time Pitch a tone s highness or lowness Depends on frequency Sound energy measured in decibels Absolute threshold 0 decibels Prolonged exposure to above 85 decibels speeds up hearing loss - The Ear -

5 Outer ear channels the sound waves through the auditory canal to the eardrum (tight membrane that vibrates) Middle Ear the chamber between the ear drum and cochlea containing three tiny bones (hammer, anvil, and stirrup) that concentrates the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochlea s oval window Inner Ear Snail shaped innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs. Cochlea a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through which sound waves trigger nerve impulses. Cochlea s membrane called oval window Motion of vibrating oval window causes ripples in the basilar membrane, which is lined with hair cells Hair cells send neural messages to the temporal lobes auditory cortex Damage to hair cells causes most hearing loss cases Brain interprets loudness from number of hair cells triggered Hard of hearing people still hear loud sounds, only need soft sounds amplified [compressed] Perception of pitch comes from 2 theories Place Theory the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea s membrane is stimulated Hermann Von Helmholtz Explains high pitched sounds, not low pitched [neural signals not neatly located on Basilar membrane] Frequency Theory the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone Explain low range, but neural impulses cannot fire faster than 1000 times per second, ruling out upper third of piano Volley Principle group of neurons alternating firing, achieving greater than 1000 per second Place = High Pitches Frequency = Low Pitches Combination = Middle Pitches We locate sound by the slight timing differences between our two ears Stereophonic = Three Dimensional Brain uses parallel processing to locate sound - Hearing Loss / Deaf Culture Conduction Hearing Loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea Ex. Eardrum punctured or tiny bones of middle ear stop vibrating Sensorineural Hearing Loss (AKA Nerve Deafness)

6 o Caused by damage to the cochlea s receptor cells [hair cells] or to the auditory nerves o Occasionally caused by disease, often biological changes with aging or loud noises o Once destroyed, remain dead. Cochlear Implant is an electronic device that translates sound into electrical signals that are wired into nerves. Implants are a debated issue because Deaf Culture argues that deafness is not a disability Sign is a real language with grammar and syntax When the brain is deprived of one sense, it enhances the others Those not involved in deaf culture/not sign fluent will feel more disabled and opt for implants - The Other Senses Touch is essential to our development Touch is a mix of pressure, warmth, cold, and pain Special nerve endings within skin create different reactions depending on where you are touched. No specific spots with specific feelings Only pressure has identifiable receptors The brain is wise enough to be most sensitive to unexpected stimulation Pain is a signal that something is wrong Pain is a property of: the senses, the region where we feel it, and the brain Phantom Limb Sensations brain can misinterpret the spontaneous central nervous system activity that occurs in the absence of normal sensory input Tinnitus The sound of silence ringing in the ears No brain, no pain. No one stimulus or receptor for pain. Integrated into other senses/receptors Gate-Control Theory theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological gate that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain. The gate is opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers and closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain Can be altered by signals from the brain Pain can be totally stimulated by the brain, no sensory input You remember the most painful moments of pain; tapering down at the end reduces overall memory of pain Pain can be treated physically and psychologically by diverting attention away from pain

7 Taste is a mix of sweet, sour, salty, and bitter Taste is a chemical sense Umami savory- associated with monosodium glutamate [MSG] Taste buds reproduce themselves every week or two Smell adds to, and changes our perception of taste Sensory Interaction The principle that one sense may influence another, as when the smell of food influences its taste. McGurk Effect see a speaker say one syllable, while hearing another, out brain blends both creating a third syllable. The senses interact Smell = olfaction Smell is a chemical sense Olfactory receptors recognize odors individually Some odors come from combination Odors can evoke memories and emotion Smell is primitive - Body Position and Movement We have millions of position and motion sensors constantly sending information to the brain Kinesthesis the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body party Vestibular Sense the sense of body movement and position, including the sense of balance Biological gyroscopes for sense of equilibrium are in the inner ear Semicircular canals and vestibular sacs move when the head rotates or tilts, stimulating hair-like receptors, alerting the brain of body position and balance.

= add definition here. Definition Slide

= add definition here. Definition Slide = add definition here Definition Slide Definition Slides Sensation = the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment. Perception

More information

Definition Slides. Sensation. Perception. Bottom-up processing. Selective attention. Top-down processing 11/3/2013

Definition Slides. Sensation. Perception. Bottom-up processing. Selective attention. Top-down processing 11/3/2013 Definition Slides Sensation = the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment. Perception = the process of organizing and interpreting

More information

The lowest level of stimulation that a person can detect. absolute threshold. Adapting one's current understandings to incorporate new information.

The lowest level of stimulation that a person can detect. absolute threshold. Adapting one's current understandings to incorporate new information. absolute threshold The lowest level of stimulation that a person can detect accommodation Adapting one's current understandings to incorporate new information. acuity Sharp perception or vision audition

More information

7. Sharp perception or vision 8. The process of transferring genetic material from one cell to another by a plasmid or bacteriophage

7. Sharp perception or vision 8. The process of transferring genetic material from one cell to another by a plasmid or bacteriophage 1. A particular shade of a given color 2. How many wave peaks pass a certain point per given time 3. Process in which the sense organs' receptor cells are stimulated and relay initial information to higher

More information

Unit 4: Sensation and Perception

Unit 4: Sensation and Perception Unit 4: Sensation and Perception Sensation a process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus (or physical) energy and encode it as neural signals. Perception a

More information

Mr. Silimperi Council Rock High School South Chapter 5 Sensation Sensation II

Mr. Silimperi Council Rock High School South Chapter 5 Sensation Sensation II Mr. Silimperi Council Rock High School South AP Psychology Name: Date: Chapter 5 Sensation Sensation II Psychophysics study of the relationship between physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological

More information

Myers Psychology for AP*

Myers Psychology for AP* Myers Psychology for AP* David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2010 *AP is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board, which

More information

Chapter 5 Test Review. Try the practice questions in the Study Guide and on line

Chapter 5 Test Review. Try the practice questions in the Study Guide and on line Chapter 5 Test Review Try the practice questions in the Study Guide and on line Printing game plan Put six slides on a page Select pure black and white as the printing option Okay, now wade into the answers>>>>

More information

Sensation Sensation bottom-down processing Perception top-down processing Psychophysics absolute threshold signal detection theory subliminal

Sensation Sensation bottom-down processing Perception top-down processing Psychophysics absolute threshold signal detection theory subliminal 1 Sensation To represent the world in our heads we must detect physical energy from the environment and encode it as neural signals (sensation) and we must select, organize and interpret our sensations

More information

Ganglion Cells Blind Spot Cornea Pupil Visual Area of the Bipolar Cells Thalamus Rods and Cones Lens Visual cortex of the occipital lobe

Ganglion Cells Blind Spot Cornea Pupil Visual Area of the Bipolar Cells Thalamus Rods and Cones Lens Visual cortex of the occipital lobe How We See How We See Cornea Ganglion Cells whose axons form the optic nerve Blind Spot the exit point at the back of the retina Pupil which is controlled by the iris Bipolar Cells Visual Area of the Thalamus

More information

Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception Sensation and Perception Sensation The process by which our sense organs receive information from the environment Perception The sorting out, interpretation, analysis,

More information

Sensation and Perception. Chapter 6

Sensation and Perception. Chapter 6 Sensation and Perception Chapter 6 1 Sensation & Perception How do we construct our representations of the external world? Text To represent the world, we must detect physical energy (a stimulus) from

More information

Myers Psychology for AP, 2e David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2014

Myers Psychology for AP, 2e David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2014 Myers Psychology for AP, 2e David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2014 AP is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board, which

More information

Unit 4 REVIEW. Name: Date:

Unit 4 REVIEW. Name: Date: Name: Date: 1. Kinesthesis refers to the A) process of organizing and interpreting sensory information. B) diminished sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus. C) quivering eye movements that enable the retina

More information

Myers Psychology for AP* David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2010

Myers Psychology for AP* David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2010 Myers Psychology for AP* David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2010 *AP is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board, which

More information

SENSES: VISION. Chapter 5: Sensation AP Psychology Fall 2014

SENSES: VISION. Chapter 5: Sensation AP Psychology Fall 2014 SENSES: VISION Chapter 5: Sensation AP Psychology Fall 2014 Sensation versus Perception Top-Down Processing (Perception) Cerebral cortex/ Association Areas Expectations Experiences Memories Schemas Anticipation

More information

Sensation and Perception. 8.2 The Senses

Sensation and Perception. 8.2 The Senses Sensation and Perception 8.2 The Senses I. Introduction A. You probably think that you have just five senses: vision, hearing, taste, smell, and touch. In addition, people have two more internal senses:

More information

Sensing and Perceiving Our World

Sensing and Perceiving Our World PSYCHOLOGY: Perspectives & Connections 2 nd Edition GREGORY J. FEIST ERIKA L. ROSENBERG Sensing and Perceiving Our World Chapter Four Chapter Preview The Long Strange Trip From Sensation to Perception

More information

Psychology Chapter 4. Sensation and Perception. Most amazing introduction ever!! Turn to page 77 and prepare to be amazed!

Psychology Chapter 4. Sensation and Perception. Most amazing introduction ever!! Turn to page 77 and prepare to be amazed! Psychology Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception Most amazing introduction ever!! Turn to page 77 and prepare to be amazed! Chapter 4 Section 1 EQ: Distinguish between sensation and perception, and explain

More information

Hearing. istockphoto/thinkstock

Hearing. istockphoto/thinkstock Hearing istockphoto/thinkstock Audition The sense or act of hearing The Stimulus Input: Sound Waves Sound waves are composed of changes in air pressure unfolding over time. Acoustical transduction: Conversion

More information

Review Sheet: Sensation and Perception (6-8%) Sensation. Date Period. 1) sensation. 2) perception. 3) bottom-up processing. 4) top-down processing

Review Sheet: Sensation and Perception (6-8%) Sensation. Date Period. 1) sensation. 2) perception. 3) bottom-up processing. 4) top-down processing Name Ms. Gabriel/Mr. McManus Date Period AP Psychology Review Sheet: Sensation and Perception (6-8%) Sensation 1) sensation 2) perception 3) bottom-up processing 4) top-down processing Thresholds 5) psychophysics

More information

Consciousness and Blindsight

Consciousness and Blindsight Consciousness and Blindsight Blindsight: The ability to respond appropriately to visual inputs while lacking the feeling of having seen them These patients are unable to see, but are able to reach for

More information

A. Acuity B. Adaptation C. Awareness D. Reception E. Overload

A. Acuity B. Adaptation C. Awareness D. Reception E. Overload Unit 4 Review #1 The longer an individual is exposed to a strong odor, the less aware of the odor the individual becomes. This phenomenon is known as sensory A. Acuity B. Adaptation C. Awareness D. Reception

More information

Study Guide Chapter 5

Study Guide Chapter 5 Name: Date: 1. Superman's eyes used, while his brain used. A) perception; sensation B) top-down processing; bottom-up processing C) bottom-up processing; top-down processing D) sensory adaptation; subliminal

More information

Dikran J. Martin. Psychology 110. Name: Date: Making Contact with the World around Us. Principal Features

Dikran J. Martin. Psychology 110. Name: Date: Making Contact with the World around Us. Principal Features Dikran J. Martin Psychology 110 Name: Date: Lecture Series: Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception: Pages: 31 Making Contact with the World around Us TEXT: Baron, Robert A. (2001). Psychology (Fifth Edition).

More information

Unit 4 Practice. PSYCHOLOGY SECTION I Time-- Minutes Questions, Unit 4 Practice/Quiz

Unit 4 Practice. PSYCHOLOGY SECTION I Time-- Minutes Questions, Unit 4 Practice/Quiz PSYCHOLOGY SECTION I Time-- Minutes Questions, Unit 4 Practice/Quiz Unit 4 Practice Directions: Each of the questions or incomplete statements below is followed by five suggested answers or completions.

More information

The Perceptual Experience

The Perceptual Experience Dikran J. Martin Introduction to Psychology Name: Date: Lecture Series: Chapter 5 Sensation and Perception Pages: 35 TEXT: Lefton, Lester A. and Brannon, Linda (2003). PSYCHOLOGY. (Eighth Edition.) Needham

More information

NERVOUS SYSTEM & SENSES TEACHER COPY

NERVOUS SYSTEM & SENSES TEACHER COPY NERVOUS SYSTEM & SENSES TEACHER COPY FUNCTIONS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM What are the three functions of the Nervous System? 1. Receives information about what is happening inside and outside of your body

More information

l3;~~?~~~,'0~'~~t~t:~:~~~~~~~~~~!,1

l3;~~?~~~,'0~'~~t~t:~:~~~~~~~~~~!,1 112 Sensation and Perception Line A should look longer, even though both lines are actually the same length. People who come from noncarpentered cultures that do not use right angles and corners often

More information

SENSATION & PERCEPTION

SENSATION & PERCEPTION SENSATION & PERCEPTION Sensation and perception result from a symphony of sensory receptors and the neurons those receptors communicate with. The receptors and neurons fire in different combinations and

More information

Chapter 18. The Senses SENSORY RECEPTION. Introduction: Superhuman Senses. Introduction: Superhuman Senses

Chapter 18. The Senses SENSORY RECEPTION. Introduction: Superhuman Senses. Introduction: Superhuman Senses Introduction: Superhuman Senses Chapter 18 The Senses! Three senses found in some animals but not humans Echolocation locating objects by detecting echoes of emitted sound waves Electroreception ability

More information

Senses and Sense Organs

Senses and Sense Organs Senses and Sense Organs SENSORY SYSTEMS Human experience is effected by both internal and external stimuli. Humans are able to distinguish among many different types of stimuli by means of a highly developed

More information

2 Sensing the Environment

2 Sensing the Environment CHAPTER 17 2 Sensing the Environment SECTION Communication and Control California Science Standards 7.5.a, 7.5.b, 7.5.g, 7.6.b BEFORE YOU READ After you read this section, you should be able to answer

More information

Biology. Slide 1 of 49. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall

Biology. Slide 1 of 49. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology 1 of 49 2 of 49 Sensory Receptors Neurons that react directly to stimuli from the environment are called sensory receptors. Sensory receptors react to stimuli by sending impulses to other neurons

More information

Sensation and Perception. A. Sensation: awareness of simple characteristics B. Perception: making complex interpretations

Sensation and Perception. A. Sensation: awareness of simple characteristics B. Perception: making complex interpretations I. Overview Sensation and Perception A. Sensation: awareness of simple characteristics B. Perception: making complex interpretations C. Top-Down vs Bottom-up Processing D. Psychophysics -- thresholds 1.

More information

PROGRESS TEST 1. Multiple-Choice Questions. a. wavelength; loudness b. amplitude; loudness c. wavelength; intensity d. amplitude; intensity

PROGRESS TEST 1. Multiple-Choice Questions. a. wavelength; loudness b. amplitude; loudness c. wavelength; intensity d. amplitude; intensity 136 Chapter 5 Sensation The receptors for this sense are located in the and --------------~ --------------~ of the inner ear. PROGRESS TEST 1 Multiple-Choice Questions Circle your answers to the following

More information

Stimulus any aspect of or change in the environment to which an organism responds. Sensation what occurs when a stimulus activates a receptor

Stimulus any aspect of or change in the environment to which an organism responds. Sensation what occurs when a stimulus activates a receptor Chapter 8 Sensation and Perception Sec 1: Sensation Stimulus any aspect of or change in the environment to which an organism responds Sensation what occurs when a stimulus activates a receptor Perception

More information

Presentation On SENSATION. Prof- Mrs.Kuldeep Kaur

Presentation On SENSATION. Prof- Mrs.Kuldeep Kaur Presentation On SENSATION Prof- Mrs.Kuldeep Kaur INTRODUCTION:- Sensation is a specialty area within Psychology that works at understanding how are senses work and how we perceive stimuli in the environment.

More information

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Outline Nervous System Sensory Systems I. II. III. IV. V. VI. Biol 105 Lecture 11 Chapter 9 Senses Sensory receptors Touch Vision Hearing and balance Smell Senses Sensory receptor cells Sensory receptors

More information

6. The term gestalt means A. grouping B. sensation C. perception D. whole Correct Answer:- D.

6. The term gestalt means A. grouping B. sensation C. perception D. whole Correct Answer:- D. 1. Each time you see you car, it projects a different image on the retinas of your eyes, yet you do not perceive it as changing. This is because of B. retinal disparity C. perceptual constancy D. figure-ground

More information

Learning Targets. Module 20. Hearing Explain how the ear transforms sound energy into neural messages.

Learning Targets. Module 20. Hearing Explain how the ear transforms sound energy into neural messages. Learning Targets Module 20 Hearing 20-1 Describe the characteristics of air pressure waves that we hear as sound. 20-2 Explain how the ear transforms sound energy into neural messages. 20-3 Discuss how

More information

Chapter 29 The Senses

Chapter 29 The Senses Chapter 29 The Senses PowerPoint Lectures for Biology: Concepts & Connections, Sixth Edition Campbell, Reece, Taylor, Simon, and Dickey Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture by Edward J. Zalisko

More information

TASTE: Taste buds are the sense organs that respond to gustatory stimuli. Chemoreceptors that respond to chemicals broken down from food in the saliva

TASTE: Taste buds are the sense organs that respond to gustatory stimuli. Chemoreceptors that respond to chemicals broken down from food in the saliva UNIT 5: Nervous System- Senses Somatic Senses Somatic senses are associated with receptors in the skin, muscles, joints, and viscera (organs of the body) Include senses of touch, pressure, temperature,

More information

Converting Sound Waves into Neural Signals, Part 1. What happens to initiate neural signals for sound?

Converting Sound Waves into Neural Signals, Part 1. What happens to initiate neural signals for sound? The Ear Outer Ear: Pinna. Collects sounds. Middle Ear: Chamber between eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones (hammer, anvil, stirrup) that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochlea

More information

IV: Visual Organization and Interpretation

IV: Visual Organization and Interpretation Module 19 IV: Visual Organization and Interpretation Describe Gestalt psychologists understanding of perceptual organization, and explain how figure-ground and grouping principles contribute to our perceptions

More information

Chapter 18 Senses SENSORY RECEPTION 10/21/2011. Sensory Receptors and Sensations. Sensory Receptors and Sensations. Sensory Receptors and Sensations

Chapter 18 Senses SENSORY RECEPTION 10/21/2011. Sensory Receptors and Sensations. Sensory Receptors and Sensations. Sensory Receptors and Sensations SENSORY RECEPTION Chapter 18 Senses s convert stimulus energy to action potentials s 1. Are specialized cells, or 2. Specialized endings that detect stimuli All stimuli are forms of energy s in eyes detect

More information

Sensory Physiology. Sensory Range Varies. Introduction to the Special Senses. How do we sense the world around us?

Sensory Physiology. Sensory Range Varies. Introduction to the Special Senses. How do we sense the world around us? Sensory Physiology How do we sense the world around us? We do not see things as they are; we see things as we are. --Anais Nin Anais Nin, French author 1903-1977 Sensory Range Varies Introduction to the

More information

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception Sensation and Perception Sensation & Perception The interplay between the external world, physiological systems, and psychological experience How the external world makes impressions on our nervous system

More information

Practice Test Questions

Practice Test Questions Practice Test Questions Multiple Choice 1. Which term is most descriptive of the process of sensation? a. transportation c. selection b. interpretation d. transduction 2. Which terms are most descriptive

More information

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception Term Explanation Application/Example/Extension Sensation is the process of using senses to detect or sense information from the environment Your eyes detect light waves, your ears detect sound waves, your

More information

Hearing. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Module 14. Hearing. Hearing

Hearing. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Module 14. Hearing. Hearing PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, 2007 1 Hearing Module 14 2 Hearing Hearing The Stimulus Input: Sound Waves The

More information

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception Sensation and Perception Sensation & Perception The interplay between the external world, physiological systems, and psychological experience How the external world makes impressions on our nervous system

More information

Vision and Audition. This section concerns the anatomy of two important sensory systems, the visual and the auditory systems.

Vision and Audition. This section concerns the anatomy of two important sensory systems, the visual and the auditory systems. Vision and Audition Vision and Audition This section concerns the anatomy of two important sensory systems, the visual and the auditory systems. The description of the organization of each begins with

More information

Sensory Systems. BIOLOGY OF HUMANS Concepts, Applications, and Issues. Judith Goodenough Betty McGuire

Sensory Systems. BIOLOGY OF HUMANS Concepts, Applications, and Issues. Judith Goodenough Betty McGuire BIOLOGY OF HUMANS Concepts, Applications, and Issues Fifth Edition Judith Goodenough Betty McGuire 9 Sensory Systems Lecture Presentation Anne Gasc Hawaii Pacific University and University of Hawaii Honolulu

More information

Sensation and Perception Chapter 6

Sensation and Perception Chapter 6 Sensation and Perception Chapter 6 Basic Principles Basic Principles Sensation- how sensory receptors and your nervous system receive stimuli I hear, I see Perception- the process of organizing and interpreting

More information

Our Senses & the World CHAPTER 4. Sensations & Senses. Characteristics (continued) Characteristics (continued) Characteristics of All Senses

Our Senses & the World CHAPTER 4. Sensations & Senses. Characteristics (continued) Characteristics (continued) Characteristics of All Senses CHAPTER 4 Sensations & Senses Our Senses & the World Characteristics of All Senses RECEPTION: Accessory Structures-modify the energy created by something in the person s environment Characteristics TRANSDUCTION:

More information

Sensation & Perception Unit Guide

Sensation & Perception Unit Guide ΨAP METEA VALLEY PSYCHOLOGY Sensation & Perception Unit Guide Essential Questions What is the difference between sensation and perception, and how are they related? What are the basic sensory concepts

More information

Chapter 15 Lecture Outline

Chapter 15 Lecture Outline Chapter 15 Lecture Outline See separate PowerPoint slides for all figures and tables preinserted into PowerPoint without notes. Copyright 2016 McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction

More information

Taste buds Gustatory cells extend taste hairs through a narrow taste pore

Taste buds Gustatory cells extend taste hairs through a narrow taste pore The Special Senses Objectives Describe the sensory organs of smell, and olfaction. Identify the accessory and internal structures of the eye, and explain their function. Explain how light stimulates the

More information

Organs of the Nervous System: brain, spinal cord, and nerves

Organs of the Nervous System: brain, spinal cord, and nerves Nervous System The Nervous System functions as a control center and coordinates all actions and reactions, sending immediate and specific information as electrical impulses. Organs of the Nervous System:

More information

The Sense Organs 10/13/2016. The Human Eye. 1. Sclera 2. Choroid 3. Retina. The eye is made up of three layers:

The Sense Organs 10/13/2016. The Human Eye. 1. Sclera 2. Choroid 3. Retina. The eye is made up of three layers: The human body gathers information from the outside world by using the five senses of: The Sense Organs 12.3 Sight Hearing Taste Smell Touch This information is essential in helping the body maintain homeostasis.

More information

First Exam. Sensation and Perception. Process of Forming Sensations. Sensation and Perception. The Eye. Our perceptual experience. Mean = 57.

First Exam. Sensation and Perception. Process of Forming Sensations. Sensation and Perception. The Eye. Our perceptual experience. Mean = 57. First Exam Sensation and Perception Mean = 57.5 SD = 11 Source of human knowledge Could we know anything without our senses? Empiricists - John Locke (1632-1704), all knowledge comes from sensory experience

More information

The Senses. senses are almost impossible to describe, and yet we use them every moment of the day.

The Senses. senses are almost impossible to describe, and yet we use them every moment of the day. The Senses Objectives 31.4.1 Discuss the sense of touch and identify the various types of sensory receptors in the skin. THINK ABOUT IT We live in a world of sensations. Think about how many of your experiences

More information

Sensation. Our sensory and perceptual processes work together to help us sort out complex processes

Sensation. Our sensory and perceptual processes work together to help us sort out complex processes Sensation Objectives: 1. Contrast the processes of sensation and perception. 2. Distinguish between absolute and difference thresholds, and discuss research findings on subliminal stimulation. 3. Describe

More information

SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

SENSATION AND PERCEPTION SENSATION AND PERCEPTION CHAPTER 5 1 LEARNING OBJECTIVES Describe transduction, sensation, and perception for the following sensory systems: Vision Audition (hearing) Skin and body Touch Pain Chemical

More information

Sensing the Environment

Sensing the Environment 2 Sensing the Environment Key Concept Your organ systems have specialized structures and functions to sense and gather information. What You Will Learn Pressure, temperature, pain, and vibration are four

More information

Chapter 7: The Nervous System

Chapter 7: The Nervous System Name: Block: Chapter 7: The Nervous System Lesson 1: How the Nervous System Works What is the Role of the Nervous System? Your nervous system receives information about what is happening both inside and

More information

Okami Study Guide: Chapter 5 1

Okami Study Guide: Chapter 5 1 Okami Study Guide: Chapter 5 1 Chapter in Review 1. Sensing is the process by which our sense organs receive raw physical or chemical energy from the natural world; perception occurs when our brains organize

More information

Senses are transducers. Change one form of energy into another Light, sound, pressure, etc. into What?

Senses are transducers. Change one form of energy into another Light, sound, pressure, etc. into What? 1 Vision 2 TRANSDUCTION Senses are transducers Change one form of energy into another Light, sound, pressure, etc. into What? Action potentials! Sensory codes Frequency code encodes information about intensity

More information

UNIT 4: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

UNIT 4: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION UNIT 4: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION BASIC PRINCIPLES OF SENSATION AND PERCEPTION OBJECTIVE 1: Contrast sensation and perception, and explain the difference between bottom-up and top-down processing. 1. The

More information

Senses- Ch. 12. Pain receptors- respond to tissue damage in all tissues except in the brain

Senses- Ch. 12. Pain receptors- respond to tissue damage in all tissues except in the brain Senses- Ch. 12 5 general types of sensory neurons or receptors are known. These specialized neurons detect stimuli from the eyes, ears, nose, mouth, and skin. The stimuli are changed into electrical signals

More information

Nervous System. Made of two parts. Central Peripheral

Nervous System. Made of two parts. Central Peripheral Nervous System Made of two parts Central Peripheral The Central Nervous System is made of the brain and the spinal cord. The Central Nervous System controls everything in the body. A system that controls

More information

THE NERVOUS SYSTEM Functions of the Nervous System nervous system stimulus response Neuron structure and function neurons nerve impulses dendrite

THE NERVOUS SYSTEM Functions of the Nervous System nervous system stimulus response Neuron structure and function neurons nerve impulses dendrite THE NERVOUS SYSTEM Functions of the Nervous System The nervous system is a network of communication used by body parts to maintain homeostasis and bodily functions. The nervous system gathers information

More information

Review on Nervous System, Senses and Musculoskeletal System

Review on Nervous System, Senses and Musculoskeletal System Review on Nervous System, Senses and Musculoskeletal System Looking for answers? Visit http://msjadah.weebly.com 1. The Nervous System a) What is the function of nervous system? The nervous system receives,

More information

is the clear, transparent part at the front of the eye. It allows light to enter the eye and it also refracts (focuses) the light onto the retina.

is the clear, transparent part at the front of the eye. It allows light to enter the eye and it also refracts (focuses) the light onto the retina. Senses- Vision Light is a small part (1/70th) of the total electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. The EM band extends from radio waves at one extreme to x-rays at the other. The eye detects light and converts

More information

o A cushion of fat surrounds most of the eye

o A cushion of fat surrounds most of the eye Name Period SPECIAL SENSES The Senses of touch o Temperature o Pressure o Pain o Smell o Taste o Sight o Hearing o Equilibrium The Eye and Vision are in the eyes has over a o Most of the eye is enclosed

More information

4. Which letter in figure 9.1 points to the fovea centralis? Ans: b

4. Which letter in figure 9.1 points to the fovea centralis? Ans: b Chapter 9: The Sensory System 1. Proprioceptors are involved in the sense of A) pain. B) temperature. C) pressure. D) movement of limbs. 2. Which are chemoreceptors? A) taste B) olfactory C) proprioceptors

More information

How does the world out there get in? How do we construct our representations of the outside world? SENSATION & PERCEPTION

How does the world out there get in? How do we construct our representations of the outside world? SENSATION & PERCEPTION How does the world out there get in? How do we construct our representations of the outside world? SENSATION & PERCEPTION SENSATION & PERCEPTION SENSATION: The detecting of physical energy from the environment

More information

SPECIAL SENSES PART I: OLFACTION & GUSTATION

SPECIAL SENSES PART I: OLFACTION & GUSTATION SPECIAL SENSES PART I: OLFACTION & GUSTATION 5 Special Senses Olfaction Gustation Vision Equilibrium Hearing Olfactory Nerves Extend through cribriform plate into nasal cavity on both sides of nasal septum

More information

Sensation and Perception: How the World Enters the Mind

Sensation and Perception: How the World Enters the Mind Sensation and Perception: How the World Enters the Mind Copyright Allyn & Bacon 2007 Sensation and Perception Sensation The awareness of properties of an object or event when a sensory receptor is stimulated

More information

Unit IV Sensation Perception

Unit IV Sensation Perception Unit IV Sensation Perception Module 16: Basic Principles of Sensation and Perception Module 17: Influences of Perception Module 18: Vision Module 19: Visual Organization and Interpretation Module 20: Hearing

More information

Answer: B difficulty: 2 conceptual Goal 3: Critical Thinking Skills in Psychology

Answer: B difficulty: 2 conceptual Goal 3: Critical Thinking Skills in Psychology Chapter Test 1. The concepts of sensation and perception are different because a. perception is something that happens to your sense organs and neurons; sensation is something that happens to you b. sensation

More information

Myers PSYCHOLOGY. (6th Ed) Chapter 5. Sensation

Myers PSYCHOLOGY. (6th Ed) Chapter 5. Sensation Myers PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed) Chapter 5 Sensation Sensation Sensation a process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energy Perception a process of organizing and

More information

Senses Other Than Vision. Hearing (Audition) Transmission of Vibrations

Senses Other Than Vision. Hearing (Audition) Transmission of Vibrations Senses Other Than Vision Hearing The Kinesthetic Senses Touch The Chemical Senses Hearing (Audition) Sound begins as pressure waves in a medium (usually air). The frequency of the pressure waves corresponds

More information

Ch. 9 Sensory Systems. Steps of sensation and perception

Ch. 9 Sensory Systems. Steps of sensation and perception Ch. 9 Sensory Systems Sensation = information about environmental conditions (inside or outside of the body) is detected and sent to CNS Vs. perception = consciously aware of sensation (only ~1% of sensations

More information

Vision Seeing is in the mind

Vision Seeing is in the mind 1 Vision Seeing is in the mind Stimulus: Light 2 Light Characteristics 1. Wavelength (hue) 2. Intensity (brightness) 3. Saturation (purity) 3 4 Hue (color): dimension of color determined by wavelength

More information

Sensa:on vs. Percep:on

Sensa:on vs. Percep:on Chapter 4: Sensa:on & Percep:on Sensa:on vs. Percep:on Sensa&on the detec:on of physical energy by the sense organs Percep&on the brain s sor:ng out, interpreta:on, and analysis of raw sensory inputs (s&mulus)

More information

-Detect heat or cold and help maintain body temperature

-Detect heat or cold and help maintain body temperature Sensory Receptors -Transduce stimulus energy and transmit signals to the central nervous system -Reception occurs when a receptor detectd a stimulus -Perception occurs in the brain as this information

More information

UNIT 4: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

UNIT 4: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION UNIT 4: SENSATION AND PERCEPTION BASIC PRINCIPLES OF SENSATION AND PERCEPTION OBJECTIVE 1: Contrast sensation and perception, and explain the difference between bottom-up and top-down processing. 1. The

More information

4: Sensation and Perception

4: Sensation and Perception STUDY GUIDE ANSWERS 4: Sensation and Perception Introduction 1. prosopagnosia 2. sensation; perception 3. bottom-up processing; top-downprocessing 4. selective attention 5. cocktail party effect; inattentional

More information

Receptors / physiology

Receptors / physiology Hearing: physiology Receptors / physiology Energy transduction First goal of a sensory/perceptual system? Transduce environmental energy into neural energy (or energy that can be interpreted by perceptual

More information

HOW DO HUMAN SENSORS WORK? - UNDERSTANDING HUMAN SENSORS AND COMPARING THEM WITH THOSE IN A ROBOT

HOW DO HUMAN SENSORS WORK? - UNDERSTANDING HUMAN SENSORS AND COMPARING THEM WITH THOSE IN A ROBOT HOW DO HUMAN SENSORS WORK? - UNDERSTANDING HUMAN SENSORS AND COMPARING THEM WITH THOSE IN A ROBOT (50 MINUTES) PRE/POST- ASSESSMENT SHEET HOW DO HUMAN SENSORS WORK? 1. What sensors or senses do we humans

More information

Special Senses. Accessory Structures of the Eye. The Eye and Vision. Accessory Structures of the Eye. Accessory Structures of the Eye

Special Senses. Accessory Structures of the Eye. The Eye and Vision. Accessory Structures of the Eye. Accessory Structures of the Eye 8 PART A Special Senses PowerPoint Lecture Slide Presentation by Jerry L. Cook, Sam Houston University ESSENTIALS OF HUMAN ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY EIGHTH EDITION ELAINE N. MARIEB The Senses General senses

More information

JEOPARDY How do Human Sensors Work? Center for Computational Neurobiology, University of Missouri

JEOPARDY How do Human Sensors Work? Center for Computational Neurobiology, University of Missouri JEOPARDY How do Human Sensors Work? Center for Computational Neurobiology, University of Missouri Robot Router Sensors Modes Touch Human WAN WAN Router Sight Sound & Sensors Encapsulation Services Basics

More information

Sensation & Perception The Visual System. Subjectivity of Perception. Sensation vs. Perception 1/9/11

Sensation & Perception The Visual System. Subjectivity of Perception. Sensation vs. Perception 1/9/11 Sensation & Perception The Visual System Subjectivity of Perception We do not perceive the world directly Perception depends on brain stimulation Distinction between sensation and perception Sensation

More information

Chapter: Control and Coordination

Chapter: Control and Coordination Table of Contents Chapter: Control and Coordination Section 1: The Nervous System Section 2: The Senses 1 The Nervous System How the Nervous System Works Responding to Stimuli Any internal or external

More information

Physiology Unit 2 SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY

Physiology Unit 2 SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY Physiology Unit 2 SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY In Physiology Today Sensory System Sensory information Conscious sensations Unconscious sensations Sensory processing Transferring stimulus energy into a graded potential

More information

AP Psychology Review Chapter 04: Sensation and Perception

AP Psychology Review Chapter 04: Sensation and Perception AP Psychology Review Chapter 04: Sensation and Perception 1. What is perception? The process by which the brain organizes and interprets sensation 2. Which senses allow for sensation at a distance? Vision

More information

DATE: NAME: CLASS: Chapter 12 Test

DATE: NAME: CLASS: Chapter 12 Test Multiple Choice Questions Decide which of the choices best completes the statement or answers the question. Locate that question number on the separate answer sheet provided. Use the procedure described

More information

Outline 2/19/2013. Please see me after class: Sarah Pagliero Ryan Paul Demetrius Prowell-Reed Ashley Rehm Giovanni Reynel Patricia Rochin

Outline 2/19/2013. Please see me after class: Sarah Pagliero Ryan Paul Demetrius Prowell-Reed Ashley Rehm Giovanni Reynel Patricia Rochin Outline 2/19/2013 PSYC 120 General Psychology Spring 2013 Lecture 8: Sensation and Perception 1 Dr. Bart Moore bamoore@napavalley.edu Office hours Tuesdays 11:00-1:00 How we sense and perceive the world

More information