The physical stimuli for taste are chemicals that can
be dissolved in water.
Gustatory receptors are taste buds that line the trenches
around tiny bumps on the tongue called papillae
Four primary types of taste
Sweet
Sour
Bitter
Salty
People are born with certain density of taste buds on the tongue.
Supertasters have 4 times
as many taste buds as
nontasters. These are two
extremes on a continuum.
Women are more likely to
be supertasters then men
Supertasters
are often less
fond of sweets
and high fat
foods, dislike
veggies, alcohol
and smoking
Stimulus Intensity
Threshold
Absolute threshold
The stimulus intensity that is detected 50%
of the time
Dividing point between energy levels that do
and do not have detectable effect
Weber's Law
The size of JND is a constant proportion of the size of the initial
stimulus and is known as "Weber's Fraction"
This applies to all the senses
Fechner's Law
The amount of your sensory experience is proportional to the number of JND's that
the stimulus above absolute threshold
The same amount of increase in the stimulus
brings about smaller and smaller increases in the
perceived increase
Sensory Adaptation
The gradual decline in sensitivity to prolonged stimulation
Not noticing the ring on your finger / do not notice
the smell of garbage after a while because you don't
get any new stimulation from your sensory receptors
The Eye
Lens
Transparent structure with muscles attached to it focus the light
Pupil
The opening of the Iris, it determines how much light is let into the eye
Retina
Rods
Specialized visual receptors that play a key role in night
and peripheral vision and are sensitive to dim light
Cones
Specialized visual receptors that play a key role in daylight and colour vision
The neural tissue lining the inside of the back surface of the eye
Definitions
Sensation
A physical feeling or perception resulting from something
that happens to / or comes into contact with the body
Perception
Ability to see, hear, or become aware of something
through the senses
Psychophysics
Study of how physical stimuli are translated into psychological experience
The Brain
The optic nerve is a collection of axons that connect the eye with the brain
The receptive field of a visual cell is the retinal area that when stimulated affects the firing of that cell
The optic nerve leaves the retina, goes to the thalamus and on to the visual cortex in the occipital lobe
Optic nerve is divided and crosses at the optic chiasm the point where the optic nerves
from inside half of each eye cross over and go to the other side of the brain
Information from the outside of each eye goes straight to the same side of the brain.
Theories of Colour
Trichromatic Theory
Hermann von Helmholtz (1852) stated that the human
eye hasthree types of receptors with different
sensitivities to different light wavelengths, specifically
red, blue, and green.
The eye mixes theses three colours to make any colour that we can see
Televisions work this way
( Tri ; Three, Chroma : colour )
Opponent Theory
Ewald Hering (1878) proposed the theory that
colour perception depends on receptors that
make opposite responses to the three pairs of
colours
Blue / Yellow
Red / Green
Black / White
These are also the colours of the afterimages you get.
Colour Vision
The visible spectrum, the shortest
wavelengths appear violet and the
longest appear red
It is a psychological interpretation because colour
is not a physical property of light so the colour
simply appears to us
Top-down Processing
Bottom-up Processing
Used in feature analysis.
Start at parts and build
towards the whole
Brain uses this also
like reversible figures
or when we perceive a
word before we know
all the individual letters
Hearing
Properties of sound
1) Wavelength or frequency
Pitch
2) Wave amplitude
Quality of loudness
3) Wave purity or mixture
Timbre or complexity of
sound wave
Stimulus for the
auditory system is sound
Sensory processing
1) Outer ear
Sound is
conducted
by vibration
of air
molecules
Pinna
Sound collecting
cone which
funnels sound
waves into the
auditory canal
and then to the
eardrum
Eardrum : a taut
membrane that
vibrates in
response to
sound waves
2) Middle ear
Sound is
conducted
by
vibration
of movable
bones
Ossicles
Smallest bones in body :
Hammer, Anvil, Stirrup
Lever system and
amplify tiny changes in
pressure
3) Inner ear
Sound is
conducted by
waves in a fluid
which are then
converted into
neural signals
and sent to the
brain
Cochlea
snail like structure with neural tissue
Basilar Membrane
runs the length of the cochlea and
holds the auditory receptors call hair
cells
Hair Cells
Stimulated by waves of fluid.
Neural signals are
routed though the
thalamus to the
auditory cortex in the
temporal lobe which has
a feature detectors of
sound
Smell
Physical stimuli
are chemical
senses dissolved in
the mucous in the
nose
Receptors for smells are called olfactory
colia, hairlike structures in the upper
portion of the nasal passages.
Pheromones are chemical
messages that can be sent
by one member of a species
to another and usually
linked to sexual attraction
Touch
Nerve endings in our skin can sense
pressure, pain, and temperature
Tactile stimulation :(sensing pressure) we can sense where a feather has touched us
Parts of the skin have
receptive fields with a
centre surround
arrangement like the eye
has with an excitatory
centre and inhibitory
surround or vice versa
Sensing Pain
Messages are sent to the brain
through two different pathways
and through two different parts
of the thalamus
Fast pathway uses myelinated neurons and registers localized pain in a fraction of a second
Slow pathway uses unmyelinated neurons and lets us know about less
localized, longer lasting aches and burning pain that comes later
One may feel less pain after being distracted, or
receiving a placebo. This shows that cognitive and
emotional processes in the higher brain centres must
be able to block signals from the skin receptors