Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Sensation
&
Perception
- SENSES - Sensation is
the
stimulation of
the sense
organs &
perception is
the selection,
organization
and
interpretation
of sensory
input.
- psychophysics
– the study of
how physical
stimuli are
translated
into
psychological
experience.
- The gustatory receptors
are taste buds that line the
trenches around tiny
bumps on the tongue called
papillae. Physical stimuli
are chemical senses
dissolved in the mucous in
the nose. Receptors for
smell are called olfactory
cilia, hair in the nasal.
- Sensory
adaptation
is the
gradual
decline in
sensitivity to
prolonged
stimulation.
- Properties of sound -
1. Wavelength or
frequency – pitch.,
measured in Hertz
(Hz). Humans only
hear from 20 – 20,000
Hz, but usually
2000-4000 Hz. 2.
Wave amplitude –
corresponds to the
psychological quality
of loudness. It is
measured in decibels
(dB) After 120 dB it is
painful. 3. Wave
purity or mixture –
timbre or complexity
of the sound wave.
- SENSE OF TOUCH - Nerve fibres that carry
incoming messages from the outside world
go to the spinal cord and then the brain
stem where they cross to the opposite side
of the brain. Tactile signals then pass
through the thalamus to the somatosensory
cortex in the parietal lobe.
- Pain - The fast pathway uses myelinated
neurons and registers localized pain in a
fraction of a second. The slow pathway
uses unmyelinated neurons and lets us
know about less localized, longer lasting
aches and burning pain that comes later.
- Absolute
threshold - Is for a
specific type of
sensory input
which is the
minimum of
stimulation that
an organism can
detect
- JND - Fechner’s law
states that the
amount of your
sensory experience
is proportional to the
number of JND’s that
the stimulus is above
absolute threshold.
Weber found that
the size of a JND is a
constant proportion
of the size of the
initial stimulus and is
known as Weber’s
fraction.
- THE EYE - The pupil
constricts in bright
light and dilates in dim
light. The lens is
structured with
muscles attached to it
that focuses on the
light. The retina is the
neural tissue lining the
inside back surface of
the eye; it absorbs
light. Cones are
specialized visual
receptors that play
role in daylight vision
and colour vision.
Rods are specialized
visual receptors that
play role in night
vision and peripheral
vision and are
sensitive to dim light.
- Signals to the brain -
The optic nerve is a
collection of axons
that connect the eye
with the brain.
- Theories - Hermann von
Helmholtz, stated that the human
eye has three types of receptors
with differing sensitivities to
different light wavelengths,
specifically, red, blue, and green.
Ewald Hering proposed the
opponent process theory that
colour perception depends on
receptors that make opposite
responses to three pairs of
colours: blue/yellow, red/green,
and black/white.
- Processing - Botom-up
processing – used in feature
analysis. Start at parts and
build toward the whole.
Top-down processing – brain
uses this also like reversible
figures or when we perceive
a word before we know all
the individual letters.
- THE EAR - There are 3 parts 1. Outer ear –
sound is conducted by vibration of air
molecules. The main part is the Pinna. 2.
Middle ear - sound is conducted by vibration of
movable bones (smallest bones in body) called
the hammer, anvil, and stirrup, known
together as the ossicles. . Inner ear – sound is
conducted by waves in a fluid which are then
converted into neural signals and sent to the
brain.