What are sensation?
Process by which sensory organs obtain information about the environment and transmit it to the brain
What are perception?
The organization of sensations into interpretation
What is transduction?
Translation of physical energy into electrical signals
What are bottom-up
Starts with raw sensory data that gets communicated to the brain
Top-down processing?
Starts with observer's expectations and knowledge
What are absolute thresholds?
Minimal amount of stimulation that can be detected half of the time
What are the different thresholds (the jnd)?
the smallest difference between 2 stimuli that a person can detect
What is Weber’s law (fraction)?
States that for 2 stimuli to be perceived as different in intensity, the second must differ from the first by a constant proportion
What is sensory adaptation?
Decreasing response of sensory receptors to unchanging stimuli. It is an evolutionary mechanism because constant sensory input provides no new information
What is signal detection theory?
suggests that perception results from both sensory information and making a judgment.
What is response bias?
A persons readiness to report detecting a stimulus
What are hits
Correctly detecting a present stimulus
What are misses
Failing to detect a present stimulus
What are false alarms
Incorrectly detecting a stimulus that isn’t present
What are correct rejections?
Correctly identifying that no stimulus is present
What factors affect response bias?
Expectations, motivation and history of signal detection errors may affect future response bias
Expectations
if you expect a stimulus you are more likely to detect it
Motivation
if you are highly motivated you are likely to report detecting a stimulus
What is the Gestalt approach?
States that we perceive objects as whole structures rather than the sum of individual parts
What is figure-ground perception?
The ability ability to distinguish between objects and its background
What are grouping principles?
Proximity, Similarity, Continuity and Closure
Proximity
We tend to group together objects objects that are close to one another
Similarity
We tend to group together objects that are similar to one another
Continuity
Brain organizes stimuli into continuous lines or patterns
Closure
We tend to perceive incomplete figures as complete
What are binocular cues for depth?
Use both eye for depth perception
What are monocular cues for depth
Use one eye to perceive depth, especially for far away objects
What is retinal (binocular) disparity?
Images produce different image on each retina
What is convergence?
Turning inward of yes toward nearby object
What are relative size
Smaller objects appear farther away than larger ones
What are relative clarity
Objects that appear clearer are perceived as closer, while hazy objects seem farther away
What is a linear perspective?
Parallel lines appear to converge as they recede into the distance
What is perceptual constancy?
Color constancy, lightness constancy, shape constancy, and size constancy
Color constancy
Consistent perception of color of objects although the amount of light changes
Lightness constancy
Consistent perception of shade of objects although the amount of light changes
Shape constancy
Perception that object’s shape remains constant despite changing shape of retinal image
Size constancy
Perception that the size of objects remains constant despite different sizes of images on retina