Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Psychophysics
- Sensation
- Detection of physical
energy emitted or reflected
by physical objects
- Occurs when energy in the external environment
or the body stimulates receptors that receive,
translate raw sensory information from the external,
and transmit it to different parts of the brain
- "Raw" material for perception
- "Entry Level"
- Data Driven
- Bottom-up processing
- Three key concepts
- Transduction
- Converts physical stimuli into neural impulses
- aka sensory stimuli
- Coding
- Converts particular sensory
stimuli into specific sensations
- Sensory Reduction
- Filters and analyzes incoming sensations
before sending a neural impulse to the brain
- Neural impulses gained
through the senses are sent to
various parts of the brain
- Doctrine of specific nerve energies
- Synesthesia
- Mixing of the senses
- e.g. Coloured letters
- Perception
- Process by which the brain selects,
organizes and interprets sensory data
- Top-down processing
- Study of how physical stimuli are
translated into physiological
experience (Fechner, 1860)
- Absolute Threshold
- The smallest quality of physical
energy that can be reliably
detected by an observer
- Vision
- A single candle flame from 30
miles on a dark, clear night
- Hearing
- The tick of a watch from 20 feet in total quiet
- Smell
- 1 drop of perfume in a 6-room apartment
- Touch
- The wing of a bee on your cheek, dropped from 1 cm
- Taste
- 1 tsp. Sugar in 2 gal. water
- Difference Threshold
- Smallest difference in
stimulation that can be reliably
detected by an observer
- Just Noticeable
Difference (JND)
- Weber's Law
- JND is a constant proportion of
the size of the initial stimulus
- Fechner's Law
- Psychophysical Scaling
- Using these scales to measure stimulus
and make conclusions on our experiences
- Signal-Detection Theory
- A theory that divides the detection of a
sensory signal into a sensory (stimulus)
and decision (decision made) process
- Subliminal Perception
- "-liminal"
- Threshold
- "Sub"
- Below
- Sensory Adaptation and Deprivation
- Adaptation
- The reduction or disappearance of
sensory responsiveness when
stimulation is unchanging or repetitious
- Prevents us from having to continuously
respond to unimportant information
- Vision
- Stimulus
- Light
- Electromagnetic Radiation
- Amplitude
- Perception of brightness/intensity
- Wavelength
- Perception of colour/hue
- Purity/Range
- Mix of wavelengths
- Perception of saturation/richness of colours
- The Eye
- Converting light into neural impulses
- Components
- Cornea
- Where light enters the eye
- Lens
- Focuses the light rays on the retina
- Iris
- Coloured ring of muscle, constricts
or dilates via amount of light
- Pupil
- Regulates the amount of light
- Saccades
- The eye msucles making
a rapid step-like rotation
- Brief fixations at
various parts of
the stimuli
- Retina
- Receptors for vision are
located in the retina
- Rods
- Light receptors
- Peripheral
- Cones
- Colour receptors
- Fovea
- A pit full of cones
- Responsible for our sharpest vision
- Blind Spot (Optic Disk)
- Near the fovea
- No visual light receptors
- Lateral Antagonism
- Occurs when neural
activity in a cell opposes
actively in surrounding cells
- Allows the retina to compare
the light falling in a specific
area against general lighting
- Hubel and Wiesel
- Early 1960s
- Microelectrode recording of axons
in primary vision cortex of animals
- Discovered
feature detectors
- Neurons that
respond selectively
to lines, edges, etc.
- Later research
- Cells specific to faces in the temporal
lobes of monkeys and humans
- Basics of Colour Vision
- Refer to "Sensory of
Adaptation and
Deprivation" for
information on light
waves
- Trichromatic Theory
- Our vision is based on three colours
that combine to create other colours
- Simple Visual Cells
- Opponent Process Theory
- Three pairs of colours
- Green/Red, Blue/Yellow, Black/White
- After Images
- Complex Visual Cells
- Perceiving Forms,
Patterns, and Objects
- Reversible figures
- Brain needs
context
- Perceptual Sets
- Opposite views of
sensation-perception
process
- Feature Detection Theory
- Bottom-Up Processing
- Form Perception
- Top-Down Processing
- Subjective Contours
- Principals of perception
- Gestalt Psychology
- Two Guiding Principles
- Large picture perceived
before component parts
- Nervous system automatically
selects simplest interpretations
- Phi Phenomenon
- Critical flicker fusion
- Movie Frames
- Principles of
form perceptions
- Figure-Ground
- Proximity
- Similarity
- Simplicity
- Continuity
- Closure
- Distal vs.
Proximal Stimuli
- Depth and distance
perception
- Binocular Cues
- Clues from both
eyes together
- Retinal Disparity
- Convergence
- Monocular Cues
- Clues from a single eye
- Motion Parllax
- Accomodation
- Pictorial
Depth Cues
- Perceptual Constancies
- stable perceptions amid changing stimuli
- Size
- Shape
- Brightness
- Hue
- Location in space
- Optical Illusions
- Discrepancy between
visual appearance and
physical reality
- Cultural differences
- Perceptual hypotheses at
work in the Mueller-Lyer
Illusion
- Hearing: The Auditory System
- Stimulus
- Sound Waves
- Amplitude
- Loudness
- Sound Pressure
- Decibels (db)
- Perceived loudness increases as decibels increase
- Wavelength
- Pitch
- Frequency
- Increase in frequency means that there's an increase in pitch
- Purity/Complexity
- Timbre
- The Ear
- External Ear (Pinna)
- Collect Sound
- Middle Ear
- The Ossicles
- Hammer
- Anvil
- Stirrup
- Inner Ear
- Cochlea
- A fluid-filled,
coiled tunnel
- Contains the hair cells,
the auditory receptors
- Lined up on the
basilar membrane
- Theories of Hearing
- Hermann von Helmholtz (1863)
- Place Theory
- Other researchers (Rutherford, 1886)
- Frequency Theory
- Georg von Bekesy (1947)
- Travelling Wave Theory
- Taste (Gustation)
- Physical Stimulus
- Soluble chemical substances
- Smell (Olfaction)
- Physical Stimulus
- Substances carried in the air
- Only sense that does not
go through the thalamus
- Touch
- Physical Stimulus
- Mechanical (touch), thermal
(temperature), chemical (pain)
- Kinesthetic and
Vestibular System
- Kinethesis
- Knowing the positions
of the parts of your body
- Receptors in joints/muscles
- Vestibular
- Equilibrium/Balance
- Semicircular Canals