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Sensation
detecting stimuli and transforming (encoding) them via receptor cells into neural messages.
-This is the process by which our sense receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimuli from the environment.
Absolute threshold
the minimum stimulation necessary to detect a particular stimulus (light, sound, pressure, taste, odor) 50% of the time.
Absolute threshold examples
1. Vision: Candle flame seen at 30 miles on a clear, dark night
2. Sound: Tick of a watch under quiet conditions at 20 feet (varies person to person)
Subliminal stimulations
stimulation that may be perceived although it is below one's absolute threshold for conscious awareness.
Affected by subliminal stimulations?
We are sometimes affected by subliminal messages, and can sometimes perceive them, but we are not persuaded by them. Backward masking exerts no influence, conscious or unconscious. Ex: Queen, Another One Bites the Dust (backwards, "It is fun to smoke marijuana")
Signal detection theory
the detection of a weak stimulus depends partly on a person's experience, expectation, motivation, and level of fatigue
Signal detection theory examples
1. Detectability: how loud, bright, or intense
2. Noise: random sounds, music, muscle twitch
3. Psychological states: expectation, hope, fear
Sensory Adaptation
diminished sensitivity to a prolonged, unchanging stimulus
Just noticeable difference
the minimum difference a person can detect between any two stimuli 50% of the time.
Focused on and researched by Weber.
The difference between naïve realism vs. constructive perception
1. Naïve realism: perceive objects as they really are
2. Constructive realism: create a cognitive understanding from what you see
Psychophysics
how the physical world gets inside of our brains/minds.
Bottom-up
take in sensory info and then assemble and integrate it
-What am I seeing or hearing?
Top-down
using models, ideas, and expectation to interpret sensory info
-Have I seen or heard it before?
-Try and predict what is coming next
Vision/Hearing
we can only see/hear a small spectrum of what is out there
The Chemical Senses
Taste and Smell—the interaction between senses
Pheromones
odorous secretions that transmit information
Pheromones examples
1. Ants: death
2. Dogs: mark territory
3. Humans: menstrual cycle
Perception
the organizing and interpreting of these transformed messages into meaningful ways
Gestalt
an organized whole. Our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes (means shape in German)
Figure ground
perceiving any object (the figure) as distinct from its surroundings (the ground)
-Used with radar in the military to hide planes
Depth perception
enables us to estimate an object's distance from us
-2d vs. 3d
Perceptual constancies
to recognize objects without being deceived by changes in their color, brightness, shape, or size
-top-down
Perceptual conflicts
brain turns something in 2d into 3d that wouldn't be possible
-The impossible doghouse in text
Contrast effects
illustrates the relational nature of perception
Motion perception
brain computes motion based partly on it assumption that shrinking objects are retreating and enlarging objects are approaching
-Also, perceives rapid series of slightly varying images as continuous movement
-shadows
Different types of groupings
proximity, continuity, closure
Proximity
we group nearby figures together. We see not six separate lines, but three sets of two lines
Continuity
we perceive smooth, continuous patterns rather than discontinuous ones.
-This pattern could be a series of alternating semicircles, but we perceive it as two continuous lines- one wavy, one straight
Closure
we fill in gaps to create a complete, whole object.
-Thus we assume that the circles in the photo are complete but partially blocked by the (illusory) triangle. Add nothing more than little line segments to close off the circles and your brain stops constructing a triangle
Perceptual adaptation
we can adjust to an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field. (Remember the example of the woman in the film who wore the inverted glasses. After a week she could ride a bike while wearing them.)
Perceptual set
a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another. We see things based on our experiences (i.e. role expectations)
Perceptual constancy
allows us to perceive an object as unchanging while the stimuli we receive from it may change
Size and shape constancy
-shape constancy: we perceive the form of familiar objects as constant even while our retinas receive changing images of them.
-size constancy: we perceive objects as having a constant size, even while our distance from them varies.
Extrasensory perception ESP
the claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input
Different types of ESP
telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition
Definitions of different types of ESP
1. Telepathy: direct communication from one mind to another
-Twins
2. Clairvoyance: perception of remote (distant) events
3. Precognition: perception of future events
ESP in-class demonstration
"pick a number between 1 and 50"
"37" 😱 that was my number
"you have a tendency to pick 35 or 37"
-between 1-10, people tend to pick 7
Parapsychology
the study of unusual psychological phenome
Consciousness
the awareness of internal and external stimuli. Selective attention to ongoing perceptions, thought, and feelings
Controlled process
demand high concentration, alertness (i.e. taking an exam)
Automatic processes
"auto pilot" little awareness or attention (i.e. driving a stick shift)
Daydreams
reduced eye movement, high level of alpha activity
early theorists James & Freud
James- streams of consciousness vs. Freud- unconscious
Different Rhythms
Infradian rhythms, Circadian rhythms, Ultradian rhythms
Infradian rhythms
occur less frequently than once a day (i.e. menstrual cycle)
Circadian rhythms
occur approximately every 24 hours (i.e. sleep/wake cycle)
Ultradian rhythms
follow a 90-minute cycle throughout the day and during sleep. They are shorter in duration than circadian rhythms
Sleep disorders
apnea, night terrors, narcolepsy
Sleep apnea
cessation of respiration
-can't sleep and breath at the same time
-more likely for old people
-might be the cause of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
Narcolepsy
A chronic sleep disorder that causes overwhelming daytime drowsiness
Night terrors (and Sleep Walking)
sleep attack
-Triggered by intense emotion- anger, surprise
-Genetic
-More common in young children- often outgrow
-Have no memory the next morning
-Happen in REM
Stages of sleep
1, 2, 3, 4 (then reverses: 4, 3, 2, REM)
Stage 1
drifting on edge of consciousness
i. Light sleep
ii. Awaken easily
iii. 15 minuets (12-12:15 if started at 12)
iv. alpha waves
Stage 2
clearly asleep
i. Sleep spindle (burst of activity)
ii. 12:20
Stage 3
hard to arouse
i. Breathing and pulse slowed
ii. 12:30
Stage 4
deep sleep
i. Delta waves
ii. Walking and talking in sleep, bed-wetting
iii. 45 minuets into sleep (12:45), halfway through Ultradian cycle
iv. if sleep deficient, can jump into stage 4
REM sleep
referred to as paradoxical sleep because our nervous system is highly active while our voluntary muscles hardly move
Why REM is important
-Can lose stage 4, not REM
-REM deprived greatly impacted
-REM rebound- go right into REM when deprived
-All other stages called NonREM
Different explanations of why we dream
psychoanalytic, physiological, computer analogy
Psychoanalytic
i. Freud- dreams are royal road to the unconscious
ii. Manifest (story of a dream) vs. latent content (underlying meaning of a dream)
iii. Criticisms- dreams don't have to mean anything
Physiological
i. Activation- synthesis hypothesis
ii. Spontaneous firing of neurons
iii. Cortex generates interpretation
iv. Criticism- takes away possibility to mean more
Computer Analogy
i. Christopher Evans
ii. Brain off-line while sleeping
iii. Mental housekeeping
Hypnosis
heightened state of suggestibility
Who discovered hypnosis it and theories about it
-Franz Mesmer
-Theories
i. Role Playing
ii. Altered state
-dissociation
Remember about hypnosis
hypnotized people usually behave in a similar fashion to un-hypnotized individuals