Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception. The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat By neurologist Oliver...
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Transcript of Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception. The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat By neurologist Oliver...
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Chapter 4Sensation and Perception
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The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
By neurologist Oliver Sacks describing his most fascinating patients
The case of Dr.P is most interesting for neuropsychology and the study of the effect of brain damage on behavior.. Dr.P’s condition would cause him to commit strange Mr. “Magoo-like” mistakes from which we may draw inferences about his rare disorder.
For example he would often mistake inanimate objects for people, and he had a problem recognizing people by face.
Dr.P appeared to have lead a normal, good natured and full life with profound musical talent.
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Dr. P
Unable to recognize a rose by sight, Dr. P could identify it by smell.
He described it as “About six inches in
length, a convoluted red form with a green linear attachment”
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Sensation and Perception: The Distinction
Sensation: stimulation of sense organsPerception: selection, organization, and
interpretation of sensory inputPsychophysics = the study of how
physical stimuli are translated into psychological experience
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Figure 4.1 The distinction between sensation and perception
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Psychophysics: Basic Concepts
Sensation begins with a detectable stimulus
Fechner: the concept of the threshold Absolute threshold: detected 50% of the time Just noticeable difference (JND): smallest
difference detectable Weber’s law: size of JND proportional to size of
initial stimulus (1/3 of original stimulus)
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Psychophysics: Concepts and Issues
Selective Attention Cocktail party effect – type of selective attention
in which you can attend to only one voice at a time
Cell phones and driving? Listening to music and studying?
Card Trick Who Dunnit?
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Psychophysics: Concepts and Issues
Signal-Detection Theory: Sensory processes + decision processes Depends on the criteion you set for how sure you
must feel before you react Depends on “noise” in the background Listening for a doorbell at a party
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Figure 4.3 Signal-detection theory
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Psychophysics: Concepts and Issues
Subliminal Perception: Existence vs. practical effects Sublimnal means “below threshold” 1957 “Eat Popcorn” messages in movies
increased popcorn sales Jon Krosnick (1992) hidden messages to affect
feeling about neutral situations – significant difference.
Disney Movies Lyrics in Reverse
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Psychophysics: Concepts and Issues
Sensory Adaptation: Decline in sensitivity to a stimulus over time Jumping into a cold pool Stinky garbage in the kitchen
• Why would we adapt to sensations?
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Sensory Transduction
In physiology, transduction is the conversion of a stimulus from one form to another.
“Transduction in the nervous system typically refers to stimulus alerting events wherein a mechanical/physical/etc stimulus is converted into an action potential which is transmitted along axons towards the central nervous system where it is integrated”
The process of converting a sensation into a perception
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The Eye:Converting Light into Neural Impulses
The eye: housing and channelingComponents:
Cornea: where light enters the eye Lens: focuses the light rays on the retina Iris: colored ring of muscle, constricts or dilates
via amount of light Pupil: regulates amount of light
Iris, Cornea, and Lens
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Figure 4.7 The human eye
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The Retina: An Extension of the CNS
Retina: absorbs light, processes imagesOptic disk: optic nerve connection/blind
spotReceptor cells:
Rods: black and white/low light vision Cones: color and daylight vision
Adaptation: becoming more or less sensitive to light as needed
Retina, Optic Nerve, & Brain
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Figure 4.8 Nearsightedness and farsightedness
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Figure 4.9 The retina
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Figure 4.10 The process of dark adaptation
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Visual Information Processing
Light rods and cones neural signals optic nerve optic chiasm lateral geniculate nucleus (thalamus) opposite half brain primary visual cortex (occipital lobe)
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Figure 4.13 Visual pathways through the brain
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Figure 4.15 The what and where pathways from the primary visual cortex
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Hubel and Wiesel:Feature Detectors and the Nobel Prize
Early 1960’s: Hubel and Wiesel Microelectrode recording of axons in primary
visual cortex of animals Discovered feature detectors: neurons that
respond selectively to lines, edges, etc. Groundbreaking research: Nobel Prize in 1981
Later research: cells specific to faces in the temporal lobes of monkeys and humans
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Theories of Color Vision
Trichromatic theory - Young and Helmholtz Receptors for red, green, blue – color mixing (like
old televisions) Colorblind = dichromatic
Opponent Process theory – Hering 3 pairs of antagonistic colors red/green, blue/yellow, black/white
Current perspective: both theories necessary
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Figure 4.18 The color circle and complementary colors
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The Afterimage Effect
A visual image the persists after a stimulus is removed Will be a compliment color to original stimulus
Castle Afterimage Effect
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Perceiving Forms, Patterns, and Objects
Bottom-up processing Elements to the whole
Top-down processing Whole to elements
Top dwon prcossenig alolws you to raed snetneces like this.
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Bottom-up v. Top-down
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Stroop Effect
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Reversible figures
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Reversible Image
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Reversible Image: The Necker Cube
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Figure and Ground
First step in perceiving an image is determining figure and ground.