SENSATION AND PERCEPTION KEY TERMS

Similar documents
Introduction to Sensation

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

Unit IV Sensation Perception

Unit 4: Sensation and Perception

Introduction to Sensation and Perception

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

Sensation and Perception

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

= add definition here. Definition Slide

Sensation and Perception

Shaw - PSYC& 100 Lilienfeld et al (2014) - Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception: How we sense and conceptualize the world

Psychology Formative Assessment #2 Answer Key

Two Sides of the Coin. Lecture Preview. Is this an illusion? Why? Psychology: From Inquiry to Understanding 2/e

IAT 814 Knowledge Visualization. Visual Attention. Lyn Bartram

Biological Psychology. Unit Two AD Mr. Cline Marshall High School Psychology

Unit 3 - Sensation & Perception. Chapter 4 Part 1: Intro. to S & P

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

(SAT). d) inhibiting automatized responses.

Sensation and Perception: How the World Enters the Mind

PERCEPTION. Our Brain s Interpretation of Sensory Inputs

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

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

(Visual) Attention. October 3, PSY Visual Attention 1

Slide 2.1. Perception and interpretation

Chapter 6. Attention. Attention

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

Sensation and Perception

Practice Test Questions

Sleep and Dreams. Sleep and Dreams. Brain Waves and Sleep Stages Typical Nightly Sleep Stages. Chapter 7 States of Consciousness

(In)Attention and Visual Awareness IAT814

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

Perception Lecture 1

Sensation occurs when external information is picked up by sensory receptors (what your 5 senses do) Perception how your brain interprets the

Welcome to. Chapter No: 08 of MKT 425: Consumer Behavior. Chapter Name: Perception. Modular: Mr. Afjal Hossain Lecturer Department of Marketing, PSTU

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

Sensation and Perception. Chapter 6

Prof. Greg Francis 7/7/08

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

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

The Perceptual Experience

Sensory Thresholds and Signal Detection. Lecture 13

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

Subliminal Programming

Myers Psychology for AP*

PSYC& Lilienfeld et al. - Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception: How We Sense and Conceptualize the World Study Guide

Introduction. Visual Perception Aditi Majumder, UCI. Perception is taken for granted!

A Heightened State of Suggestibility.

Psychology. January 11, 2019.

Unit IV Sensation Perception

Attention. Concentrating and focusing of mental effort that is:

Review #6 ( )

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

Today s Agenda. Human abilities Cognition Review for Exam1

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

Multimodal interactions: visual-auditory

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

PERCEPTION and COMMUNICATION. Week 2

Note:- Receptors are the person who receives any images from outer environment.

Elements of Communication

Sensation versus Perception *

Chapter 4. Two Types of Attention. Selective Listening 25/09/2012. Paying Attention. How does selective attention work?

15.301/310, Managerial Psychology Prof. Dan Ariely Lecture 3: Perception

AP Psychology/Spencer Cumulative Exam 2 Review

Sensation and Perception

Modules 7. Consciousness and Attention. sleep/hypnosis 1

Observation is the capacity of the individual to know the environment by the use of his senses. There are two steps in the process of observation:

The Nervous System. Learning Objective (L.O.): I will identify the functions and parts of the nervous system.

How do we see the world?

Introduction to Computational Neuroscience

Hearing. istockphoto/thinkstock

Diseño y Evaluación de Sistemas Interactivos COM Percepción y Estructura Visual 17 de Agosto de 2010

Categorical Perception

Unit 4 REVIEW. Name: Date:

Sensing and Perceiving Our World

the human 1 of 3 Lecture 6 chapter 1 Remember to start on your paper prototyping

Sensation. I. Basic Concepts II. Characteristics of Sensory Systems III. The Visual System

Perception. Sensation and Perception. Sensory Systems An Overview of the Perception Process

Sensation is the conscious experience associated with an environmental stimulus. It is the acquisition of raw information by the body s sense organs

d). Draw the following neural circuits (using the notation taught in class) and then say what would happen if they were stimulated as specified.

Test your Knowledge: Recognizing Delirium

SENSORY FUNCTIONING CHAPTER 44

What is stress? Stress is an emotional/ bodily reaction to

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

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

Attention. What is attention? Attention metaphors. Definitions of attention. Chapter 6. Attention as a mental process

ID# Exam 2 PS 325, Fall 2009

Communication (Journal)

Nervous System. Made of two parts. Central Peripheral

Psychology Perception

H.O.T. Theory, Concepts, and Synesthesia: A Reply to Adams and Shreve

psychology of visual perception C O M M U N I C A T I O N D E S I G N, A N I M A T E D I M A G E 2014/2015

Consciousness and Blindsight

Sensation, Part 1 Gleitman et al. (2011), Chapter 4

ID# Exam 2 PS 325, Fall 2003

Schwartz and Krantz, Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception. 8.2 The Senses

INFORMATION PROCESSING DURING THE PERFORMANCE OF SKILLS IN PHYSICAL ACTIVITY

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

Lesson 5 Sensation, Perception, Memory, and The Conscious Mind

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

Transcription:

SENSATION AND PERCEPTION KEY TERMS

BOTTOM-UP PROCESSING BOTTOM-UP PROCESSING refers to processing sensory information as it is coming in. In other words, if I flash a random picture on the screen, your eyes detect the features, your brain pieces it together, and you perceive a picture. What you see is based only on the sensory information coming in. Bottom-up refers to the way it is built up from the smallest pieces of sensory information.

TOP-DOWN PROCESSING TOP-DOWN PROCESSING, on the other hand, refers to perception that is driven by cognition. Your brain applies what it knows and what it expects to perceive and fills in the blanks, so to speak. Look at the shape in the box to the right. Seen alone, your brain engages in bottom-up processing. There are two thick vertical lines and three thin horizontal lines. There is no context to give it a specific meaning, so there is no top-down processing involved.

TOP-DOWN PROCESSING Now, look at the same shape in two different contexts. Surrounded by sequential letters, your brain expects the shape to be a letter and to complete the sequence. In that context, you perceive the lines to form the shape of the letter B. Surrounded by numbers, the same shape now looks like the number 13. When given a context, your perception is driven by your cognitive expectations. Now you are processing the shape in a top-down fashion.

SELECTIVE ATTENTION 11,000,000 bits of information per second Consciously process about 40 Cocktail Party Effect Your ability to attend to only one voice among many

INATTENTIONAL BLINDNESS Inattentional blindness, also known as perceptual blindness, is a psychological lack of attention that is not associated with any vision defects or deficits.

CHANGE BLINDNESS Change blindness is a perceptual phenomenon that occurs when a change in a visual stimulus is introduced and the observer does not notice it.

The pop-out effect (also known as pop-out phenomenon) occurs when a visual stimulus that is comprised of differing components has mostly similar looking objects but one differing object that 'pops-out' or stands out very noticeably from the other objects in the visual field. When looking at a visual field a unique stimulus can be located much faster than stimuli that is similar. POP-OUT EFFECT

TRANSDUCTION Conversion of one form of energy into another. In sensation, the transforming of stimulus energies, such as sights, sounds, and smells, into neural impulses our brain can interpret.

ABSOLUTE THRESHOLD The term absolute threshold is often used in neuroscience and experimental research. An absolute threshold is the smallest detectable level of a stimulus. For example, in an experiment on sound detention, researchers may present a sound with varying levels of volume. The smallest level that a participant is able to hear is the absolute threshold. However, it is important to note that at such low levels, participants may only detect the stimulus part of the time. Because of this, the absolute threshold is usually defined as the smallest level of a stimulus that a person is able to detect 50 percent of the time.

SIGNAL DETECTION THEORY Predicts when we will detect weak signals (measured as our ratio of hits to false alarms ) Your ability or likelihood to detect some stimulus is affected by the intensity of the stimulus (e.g., how loud a noise is) and your physical and psychological state (e.g., how alert you are). For example, when you walk to your car that is parked in an empty parking lot late at night all by yourself, you might be much more aware of noises because the situation is somewhat threatening (you are primed and listening carefully to hear anything and everything). In this case, you may hear some slight noises that you might otherwise not hear if you were in a different situation that was not as threatening. Thus, your ability to detect signals or noises has been affected by these factors.

SUBLIMINAL When we are presented with some information that is just below our conscious awareness but still reaches our brains, it is a subliminal message - meaning, the information is getting into our systems and to our brains without us truly being aware of it.

JUST NOTICEABLE DIFFERENCE THRESHOLD The absolute threshold should not be confused with the difference threshold, which is the smallest possible detectable difference between two stimuli.

SENSORY ADAPTATION We get used to everything. One reason we get used to everything is because of reduced sensitivity to stimulation that results from repeated presentations of that stimulation. Does not apply to our eyes that are constantly moving. Allows us to focus on informative changes in our environment

PERCEPTUAL SET Perceptual set is a tendency to perceive or notice some aspects of the available sensory data and ignore others. This is the expectation of a person to see or perceive something based on prior experience. Stereotypes are an example of perceptual set

CONTEXT EFFECTS The Context Effect is a part of Cognitive Psychology that states that the context (environmental factors) that surrounds an event effects how an event is perceived and remembered. This effect, that is largely used in the science of marketing, holds that an event is more favorably perceived and remembered when the surrounding environment is comfortable and appealing.

EMOTION AND MOTIVATION In addition to context, emotion and motivation can also create expectations and color our interpretation of events and behaviors.