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PERCEPTION!

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Our Essential Questions

How does perception influence our perspectives?

What is the Gestalt perspective?What are the various types of

perceptions we have?

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Perception

The process of integrating, organizing, and interpreting sensation

Sensation is the stimulation, perception is the interpretation

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What do you think this mental integration, organization and interpretation is influenced by?

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Perceptions influenced by: ----Motivation----Values----Expectations----Experience----Culture----Cognitive Style----Personality

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Perceptual ConstancyWe perceive objects as

unchanging despite changes in retinal imagecolor/ brightnessshape size

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The door changes shape, but you know that it doesn’t really change

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Visual capture

tendency for vision to dominate the other senses

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Gestalt Psychology“unified whole”Whole>sum of its partsIf we break experiences into their

basic parts, something important is lost

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What do you see here?

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What do you see here?

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cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg. The

phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan mnid, aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr

the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and

you can sitll raed it wouthit a porbelm.Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not

raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. Amzanig huh? yaeh and I awlyas

tghuhot slpeling was ipmorantt! 

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Gsaeltt pysolgchoy epxanlis why taetlned eodtirs msis ebmarsasrnig tpyos. Our mnid prerefs "ctrorecing" waht we altclauy see.

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• Dyslexia: inability to revisualize the gestalt of the word•Is this a problem with sensation or perception?

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Can you remember?

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How’d you do?

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Groupingtendency to organize stimuli into

groupsAka “chunking”Patterns, shapes, forms

How many #s can we remember?

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So how do we group?SimilarityProximityContinuityClosure

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Grouping - Similarity

The tendency to place items that look similar into a group

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Grouping - ProximityThe tendency to

place objects that are physically close to each other in a group

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Grouping - Continuity

The tendency to follow a line and continue along the simplest, smoothest path

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Grouping - Closure

The tendency to fill in gaps in a perceptual field

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Perceptual Set

a bias or readiness to perceive certain aspects of available sensory data and to ignore others

Stereotypes?

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Depth Perception

ability to see objects in 3Dallows us to judge distance

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Let’s try it!Binocular vs. monocular…which one’s

better?With both eyes open, touch your index

fingers together in front of your face.Now close one eye and try.Try at different distances.

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Depth Perception: Binocular Depth Cues

Module 10: Perception

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Depth Perception – Binocular CuesRetinal disparity: differences

between 2 images of 1 scenemost effective when the item is

quite close to the person

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Depth Perception – Binocular CuesConvergence: 2 eyes focusing

on the same object creates tensionThe more tension, the closer the

objectWorks best at close distances

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Depth Perception: Monocular Depth Cues

Module 10: Perception

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Depth Perception - Monocular CuesRelative size: Using the perceived

size of a familiar object to determine depth

The larger the object appears, the closer the object is to the viewer

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Depth Perception - Monocular CuesRelative motion: when moving, we

can determine depth by focusing on a distant object

Aka motion parallax http://psych.hanover.edu/krantz/motionparallax/motionparallax.html

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Relative Motion

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Depth Perception – Monocular CuesFigure-ground: tendency to organize

stimuli into objects (the figures) that stand out from their surrounding (the ground)figure = object (s) that draws one’s

attentionground = background

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What is the figure, and what is the background here?

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Depth Perception – Monocular CuesInterposition/Overlap: closer object

blocks distant object

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Depth Perception – Monocular CuesRelative clarity: distant objects are

less clear than nearby objectsTexture gradient: distant objects have

a smoother texture than nearby objects

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Depth Perception – Monocular CuesRelative height: distant objects

appear higher in your field of vision than do closer objects

Linear perspective: parallel lines appear to converge in the distancehorizon

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Let’s Wrap Up

Explain the following: “Everyday experience is not a literal transcript of the world, but an ongoing process of construction by the mind.”

How does perception influence our perspectives?

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images that differ from objective reality

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IllusionsStroboscopic motion: timed flashing

lights that gives the illusion of movement

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