Notes
Sensation:
Stimulation of the sense organs.
Perception:
The selection, organization, and interpretation of sensory input
Psychophysics:
The study of how physical stimuli are translated into psychological experiences.
Gustav Fechner (1860):
Authored Elemente der Psychophysik.
Gestalt Psychology
Emphasizes organizing visual elements into whole forms. - Principles: Figure-ground relationship, similarity, proximity, closure, and continuity
Illusions and Perceptual Constancies
Context can create illusions in perception (e.g., size constancy disruptions).
Examples include visual illusions like the Müller-Lyer illusion.
The perception process involves complex interactions between sensory inputs, contextual factors, and cognitive processes.
Stimulus:
Any detectable input from the environment.
Absolute Threshold:
For a specific type of sensory input, the minimum amount of stimulation that an organism can detect.
Defined as the intensity detected 50% of the time.
Examples of Absolute Thresholds:
Sense | Absolute Threshold Example |
---|---|
Vision | Candle flame seen at 50 km on a dark night |
Hearing | Tick of a watch at 6 m under quiet conditions |
Taste | 5 ml sugar in 7.5 L water |
Smell | Drop of perfume diffused in six-room apartment |
Touch | Wing of fly falling on cheek from 1 cm |
JND:
The smallest difference in stimulation that a specific sense can detect.
Also known as Difference Threshold.
Weber’s Law:
The size of a JND is constant and proportional to the size of the original stimulus.
Constants differ based on sensory input types.
Measurement in perception is relative, not absolute.
Fechner’s Law:
Subjective sensation is proportional to the logarithm of stimulus intensity.
As stimulus intensity increases, perceived increases are smaller.
Signal Detection Theory:
Suggests detection of stimuli involves both decision and sensory processes influenced by various factors beyond stimulus intensity.
Signal Detection Outcomes:
Present Stimulus:
Hit: Correctly detecting stimulus.
Miss: Failing to detect stimulus.
Absent Stimulus:
False Alarm: Incorrectly reporting stimulus is present.
Correct Rejection: Correctly identifying absence of stimulus
Subliminal Perception:
Registration of sensory input without conscious awareness.
Notably studied starting with James Vicary in 1957.
Sensory Adaptation:
Gradual decline in sensitivity due to prolonged stimulation.
An adaptive process that helps in detecting changes in the environment.
Sense of Hearing
Sound Waves:
Vibrations of molecules traveling through a medium (e.g., air).
Travel at a fraction of the speed of light.
Characteristics of Sound Waves
Amplitude:
Affects perception of loudness.
Frequency:
Measured in Hertz (Hz); affects pitch.
Wavelength:
Relates to distance and pitch.
Purity:
Influences timbre.
Hearing Capacities
Humans: 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz
Dogs: 50 Hz to 45,000 Hz
Cats: 45 Hz to 85,000 Hz
Bats: 20 Hz to 120,000 Hz
Dolphins: 0.25 Hz to 200,000 Hz
Elephants: 5 Hz to 10,000 Hz
The Human Ear
Three Major Parts:
Outer ear, middle ear, and inner ear.
Functions:
Conducts sound waves and converts vibrations into neural activity.
Anatomy of the Ear
Outer Ear: Pinna (ear flap) and ear canal.
Middle Ear: Ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes) and the tympanic membrane (eardrum).
Inner Ear: Cochlea (transforms vibrations) and semicircular canals (balance).
Theories of Hearing
Pitch Perception:
Two main theories:
Place Theory:
Pitch corresponds to vibrations along the basilar membrane.
Frequency Theory:
Pitch corresponds to the overall vibration frequency of the basilar membrane.
Auditory Localization
Locating Sound:
Ears set apart help in sound localization.
Two important cues:
Sound Intensity: Loudness differences between ears.
Timing of Sounds: Arrival timing differences aid in localization.
Inability to Hear
1 in 1000 people is deaf; many others have hearing deficits.
Types of Deafness:
Conductive Deafness: Involves outer/middle ear.
Nerve Deafness: Involves the inner ear.
Noise-induced hearing loss is common.
Effects of Music
Musicians often have larger motor, auditory, and visuospatial areas in the cerebellum.
Music training is linked to language abilities and cognitive enhancements (e.g., Mozart Effect).
The Gustatory System
Sense of Taste:
Stimuli are soluble chemical substances with receptors located in taste buds.
Tastes and Taste Buds
Taste perception varies based on neural activity in receptors, some preferences innate, others learned.
Variability in taste sensitivity: non-tasters, medium tasters, supertasters.
Four primary tastes: salty, sweet, sour, bitter (Umami as fifth).
Taste Bud Types:
Fungiform, Circumvallate, Foliate papillae.
Perception of flavour:
Flavour is influenced by taste, smell, and tactile sensations.
Odour perception is vital for flavour interpretation
The Olfactory System
Sense of Smell:
Humans have about 350 types of olfactory receptors, distinguishing around 10,000 odours
Pheromones: Chemical signals influencing behaviors between individuals of the same species.
The Tactile System
Sense of Touch:
Physical stimuli are mechanical, thermal, and chemical energies.
Perception includes warmth, cold, pressure, and pain.
Tactile Receptors: Human skin has at least six types of sensory receptors, allowing for accurate localization of touch.
Perceiving Pain: Pain perception can be influenced by various factors, including expectations and coping mechanisms (e.g., placebo effect)
Gate Control Theory:
Incoming pain sensations pass through a 'gate' in the spinal cord, influenced by activity patterns.
The Kinesthetic & Vestibular Systems
Kinesthetic System: Monitors body positions.
Vestibular System: Responds to gravity, critical for orientation and balance
Sense of Sight:
Light is the primary stimulus, traveling as a wave.
Light Properties
Amplitude: Affects brightness perception.
Wavelength: Affects color perception.
Purity: Influences saturation of colors.
Anatomy of the Eye
Major Components: Iris, cornea, pupil, lens, retina.
Functions: Channeling light to retina where images are processed.
Visual Receptors:
Cones: Responsible for Daytime and color vision (concentrated in fovea)
Rods: Important for night and peripheral vision.
Adaptation and Colour
Dark Adaptation: Process where eyes become more sensitive in low light; takes ~30 minutes.
Colour Perception
Properties of Light: Influence the perception of hue, brightness, and saturation.
Colour Mixing: Two types: Additive and subtractive.
Theories of Colour Vision
Trichromatic Theory: Three types of receptors for red, green, and blue influences color perception and explains color blindness.
Opponent-Process Theory: Color perception involves three pairs of opposing colors.
Depth Perception
Definition: Interpretation of visual cues for spatial understanding.
Cues for Depth Perception:
Monocular Cues: Based on single eye views. - Examples include linear perspective and relative size.
Binocular Cues: Based on differing views from two eyes, involving retinal disparity and convergence.
Cognition and Vision
Bottom-up Processing: Recognizing object by starting with individual elements.
Top-down Processing: Recognition influenced by existing knowledge and expectations.
Reading
Psychology Can. 6th Ed. Schacter Chapter 4