TO DISPLAY VIA PROJECTOR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 124
About This Presentation
Title:

TO DISPLAY VIA PROJECTOR

Description:

Aging silent movie queen Norma Desmond. 'I am big; it's the pictures that got small! ... on TV means they could end up absolutely terrified of going on a train. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:146
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 125
Provided by: psycCant
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: TO DISPLAY VIA PROJECTOR


1
ECOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY PSYC 450 / APSY 609 D
ean Owen 3 June 2005 The ecological unit
of analysis. Ecological models. The commitment
to realism.
2
UNIT FOR ADAPTIVE THINKING
  • I view the mind in relation to its environment.
  • This book is about rethinking rationality as
    adaptive thinking to understand how minds cope
    with specific environments, ecological and
    social.
  • Human thinking from scientific creativity to
    simply understanding what a positive HIV test
    means happens partly outside the
    mind. contd

3
ADAPTIVE THINKING contd
  • For instance, new laboratory instruments can
    inspire scientists to create new metaphors and
    theories, and new ways of representing
    uncertainties can either cloud or facilitate
    physicians understandings of risks.
  • In this sense, insight can come from outside the
    mind. Gigerenzer, 2000

4
ADAPTIVE THINKING contd
  • The program of ecological rationality studies the
    mind in relation to its environment, past and
    present.
  • Bounded rationality stresses that sound reasoning
    can be achieved by simple heurisitics that do not
    follow the prescriptions of logic and
    probability.
  • Social rationality is a form of ecological
    rationality in which the environment consists of
    conspecifics and that highlights the importance
    of domain-specific behavior and cognition in
    social environments. Gigerenzer,
    2000

5
THE ECOLOGICALUNIT OF ANALYSIS
  • Happiness, similarly, may be conceptualized more
    correctly as an interactional product of a
    persons stable pattern of proactions and
    reactions to life experiences than as either a
    result of personality or events alone.
  • Accordingly, we believe that the reciprocal
    nature between personality and life events
    warrants more attention in future subjective
    well-being research. Suh, Diener,
    Fujita (1996)

6
THE ECOLOGICAL UNIT OF ANALYSIS
  • If you are a sex offender, you know you dont get
    left alone in a room with a young child,
    especially if youre feeling sad and alone.
  • You ring adult friends or a buddy.
  • Its dealing with the whole situation of
    offending, not just whats going on in their
    heads. Steve Hudson

7
Does an adult
  • insist on hugging, touching, kissing, tickling,
    wrestling with or holding a child even when the
    child doesnt want this affection?
  • manage to get time alone or insists on time alone
    with a child with no interruptions?
  • spend most of his or her spare time with children
    and has little interest in spending time with
    someone their own age?
  • regularly offer to baby-sit many different
    children for free or take children on overnight
    outings alone?
  • frequently walk in on children or teens in the
    bathroom?

8
DEPRESSING ENVIRONMENT
  • What a dreadful room you have, Rodya, just like
    a coffin, said Pulkeria Alexandrovna, breaking
    the oppressive silence.
  • Im sure it is responsible for at least half
    your depression.
  • Room? said he absently. Yes, the room has
    made a big contribution. Ive thought of that
    too. Dostoevsky, 1965
    Crime and Punishment

9
DEPRESSING ENVIRONMENT
  • Caroline Malings three children have all been
    through Otago University.
  • She says in the seven years her son has been
    there she has ventured into one of his flats only
    once.
  • I didnt want to look inside.
  • They made me feel utterly depressed and
    physically sick, she recalls.

10
THE ECOLOGICAL SELF(Neisser, 1993)
  • A self is not a special part of a person (or of
    a brain) it is a whole person considered from a
    particular point of view.
  • The ecological self is the individual considered
    as an active agent in the immediate environment.
  • The interpersonal self is the same individual
    considered from a different point of view
    namely, as engaging in face-to-face interaction
    with others.

11
REFERENT OF MEMORY
  • The best part of our memories, lies outside
    ourselves, in a rainy breath, in the smell of a
    closed-up room or the smell of the first blaze of
    a fire. Proust

12
REFERENT OF MOTIVATION(Reed, 1996)
  • Ecological psychology sees motivation as
    functional, not as an (internal) mechanism.
  • From an ecological perspective, motivation is
    constituted by the kinds of efforts animals tend
    to make to obtain values and meanings from the
    environment.
  • These efforts may be influenced by internal
    mechanisms, but not reduced to them.

13
PSYCHOLOGY IN CONTEXT
  • Psychological phenomena cannot be explained in
    terms of psychological activities alone, e.g,
    attending, learning, thinking, i.e., by mental
    events or processes with a brain locus.
  • The referential context (task demands of,
    environmental support for, event referred to,
    situation confronted with) must be taken into
    account.

14
(No Transcript)
15
THE PROBLEM ADDRESSED SCIENTIFICALLY
  • Concerned about the impact of alcohol on
    behavior, an Iroquois chief proposed that half of
    his braves drink alcoholic spirits and half drink
    water.
  • He predicted that the group drinking alcohol
    would soon make fools of themselves.

16
ALCOHOLISM FROM AN ECOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
  • The ecological approach offers an alternative way
    to look at alcoholism.
  • More than the biopsychosocial perspective, the
    ecological approach focuses on dynamic processes,
    adjustment to environment, and development.
  • According to the ecological perspective, the
    context surrounding an individual is essential to
    adequately understand a behaviour. contd

17
ALCOHOLISM contd
  • This perspective includes globally all the
    physical, cultural, political, economic, and
    social factors that can directly or indirectly
    affect behaviours.
  • Individual characteristics and environmental
    factors are equally important not as disparate
    elements, but rather as bidirectional exchanges.
  • The quality of the adjustment lays on this
    individual/environment harmonization.

18
ALCOHOLISM contd
  • Consequently, the developmental ecological
    perspective appears as a particularly well-suited
    framework to integrate the imputed protective and
    risk factors for alcoholism into a comprehensive
    etiologic model.

19
An etiological model of alcoholism from a
developmental ecological perspective.
Simoneau Bergeron, 2000
20
Vision without action is a daydream.Action
without vision is a nightmare.
  • Ian Shaw
  • Pro Vice-Chancellor
  • College of Science
  • University of Canterbury

21
ECOLOGICAL VALIDITY OF RESEARCH(Hoc, 2001)
  • Ecological validity enables researchers to
    transfer findings from artificial experimental
    situations to real work (natural, including
    cultural) situations.
  • Knowing the strong link between action goals and
    cognitive processes in natural situations,
    particular attention should be devoted to the
    perception-action loop in every artificial
    situation.

22
(No Transcript)
23
The Perceptual Cycle (Neisser, 1976)
Information
Modifies
Samples
Exploration
Schema
Directs
24
Connolly Wagners (1988) perceptual cycle.
25
Connolly Wagners (1988) goal / value cycle.
26
Connolly Wagners (1988) two-cycles model.
27
The coimplicative relations among perceiving,
acting, and the enviromental niche.Michaels
Carello, 1981
28
FLOW FIELD
ACTION (high-energy coupling)
PERCEPTION (low-energy coupling)
FORCE FIELD
(Kugler Turvey, 1987)
29
Warrens (1988) conceptualization of
theperception-action cycle
forces
laws of control
laws of physics
laws of ecological optics
30
The two-cycles model of decision
making.Connolly Wagner (1988)
31
DECISION CYCLES Orasanu Connolly,1993
  • In everyday decisions, everyday decisions are
    embedded in larger tasks that the decision maker
    is trying to accomplish.

32
DECISION CYCLES contd
  • Decisions are embedded in task cycles that
    consist of
  • defining what the problem is,
  • understanding what a reasonable solution would
    look like,
  • taking action to reach that goal, and
  • evaluating the effects of that action.

33
DECISION MAKING PHASESCarroll Johnson, 1990
  • 1. Recognition that a decision needs to be made.
  • 2. Formulation of the problem.
  • 3. Consideration of alternatives.
  • 4. Information search.
  • 5. Judgement or choice.
  • 6. Implementation of decision
  • 7. Evaluation of the outcome.

34
PROBLEM SOLVING CYCLE
  • Sir Joe Bennett (October 17) can apply a
    problem-solving model to help with his concerns
    over poor literacy
  • Identify the problem, think of as many
    solutions as possible, choose one, implement
    it, and evaluate it.
  • If necessary, return to the start so the cycle
    can continue until the problem is solved.
  • It is time to start applying the model, with
    spelling reform as a solution.
  • Chrissy Parker
  • Simplified Spelling Society
  • October 24, 2001

35
THE MOTIVATION - ABILITY - OPPORTUNITY -
BEHAVIOUR MODEL
(Ölander Thøgersen, 1995)
Motivation
Evaluations of outcomes
Ability Habit Task Knowledge
Attitude towards the behaviour
Intention
Behaviour
Opportunity Overall situational conditions
Social norm
36
Evaluate
KNOWLEDGE-BASED
WORKSPACE
Interpret Consequences
Identify State of System
Define Task
DYNAMIC WORLD MODEL
RULE-BASED
Observe Information Data
Formulate Procedure
Stimulus
Execution
Activation
Response
SKILL-BASED
37
STRESSORS(Stressful Events)
PERCEPTIONOF THREAT
CATASTROPHICMISINTERPRETATION
EMOTIONAL REACTION(e.g. Anxiety, Anger)
BODILY CHANGES
(Anon.)
38
  • ENDED 3 JUNE 2005

39
THE WORLD
GoalsWhat wewant to happen
EvaluationComparing what happenedwith what
wewanted to happen
ExecutionWhat we doto the world
40
THE WORLD
Goals
An intention to act so as to achieve the goal
The actual sequence of actions that we plan to do
The physical execution of that action sequence
41
THE WORLD
Goals
Evaluation of the interpretations withwhat we
expected to happen
Interpreting the perception according to our
expectations
Perceiving the state of the world
42
THE WORLD
Goals
Evaluation of interpretations
Intention to act
Sequence of actions
Interpreting the perception
Execution ofthe action sequence
Perceiving the stateof the world
43
EVALUATION
44
THE WORLD
  • Goals
  • Controlling the discrepancy
  • between the state of the world
  • and the desired state

45
THE WORLD
Goals
Perceiving the discrepancybetween the state of
the worldand the desired state
46
THE WORLD
THE ECOLOGICAL CYCLE
GOALS
Controlling the discrepancy between the state of
the world and the desired state

Perceiving thediscrepancy between the state of
the worldand the desired state

47
(No Transcript)
48
REALISM DEFINED
  • Material objects exist apart from awareness of
    them.
  • The real world exists and can be known, at least
    in part.
  • How do we come to know about it?

49
SOCIALIST REALISM
  • A life-size statue of Lenin with the head of
    Mickey Mouse is to go on display in Moscow.
  • The 1.6-m statue is the work of Russian artist
    Alexander Kosolapov.
  • He says it celebrates the heritage of socialist
    realism.

50
NAÏVE REALISM
  • The illusion of naïve realism, according to
    which things are as they are perceived by us
    through our senses, dominates the daily life of
    men and animals. Albert
    Einstein,1944

51
NAÏVE REALISM Bertrand Russell, 1940
We think that grass is green, that stones are har
d,
and that snow is cold.
  • But physics assures us that the greenness of
    grass, the hardness of stones, and the coldness
    of snow are not the greenness, hardness and
    coldness that we know in our own experience.
  • The observer, when he seems to himself to be
    observing a stone, is really observing the
    effects of the stone upon himself.

52
ECOLOGICAL REALISM
  • Shaw, R. E., Turvey, M. T., Mace, W. M. (1982).
    Ecological psychology The consequences of a
    commitment to realism. In W. Weimer D. S.
    Palermo (Eds.), Cognition and the symbolic
    processes II (pp. 159-226). Hillsdale, NJ
    Erlbaum.
  • Ecological realism A reality arising from
    interaction with the environment and feedback
    from the consequences of those actions.

53
PERCEPTUAL REALISM
  • Perceptual realism is a philosophical disposition
    with regard to the method by which animals
    perform the act of perceiving.
  • Gibson's premise It is a fact that animals, as
    epistemic agents, are in contact with
    activity-relevant properties of their
    environments. Kugler, 1985

54
THE PERCEPTION-ACTION CYCLE
  • What makes active movement effective in achieving
    perceptual-motor adaptation?
  • Feedback from active movement provides direct,
    immediate information on the extent and direction
    of placement errors,
  • which in turn may provide a basis for correction
    or for learning a new relation.
  • Thus, what appears to be crucial for adaptation
    is visual feedback about the mismatch between
    actual movement and its consequence.
    Schiffman, 1996

55
THE REAL WORLD
  • The world is as many ways as it can be truly
    described, seen, pictured, etc, and there is no
    such thing as the way the world
    is. Goodman, 1968
  • Theorists describe the world the way they would
    like it to be. Osipow, 1997

56
REAL WORLD VERSUSSOCIAL CONSTRUCTION
  • There is a real world
  • its properties are not just social
    constructions
  • facts and evidence do matter.
  • What sane person would contend otherwise?
  • Alan Sokal, 1996

57
THEORETICAL REALISM
  • The extent to which a theoretical description
    matches the real-world phenomenon, i.e., is an
    accurate representation of reality.
  • E.g., Darwin's model of domestic selection as an
    analog of natural selection.

58
MODELS REALITY
  • The recipe of a cake tells us nothing about how
    good the cake tastes.
  • A scientific model is no closer to the reality of
    the materials than a recipe is to the
    mouth-watering flavour of the cake.
    Barton, 1997

59
(No Transcript)
60
REALITY CHECK
  • The inner dimension of reality is occupied by the
    activities that keep it going.
  • William James, 1909
  • Dont let your preoccupation with reality stifle
    your imagination. NASA slogan
  • I believe in looking reality straight in the eye
    and denying it. Garrison Keillor

61
REALITY
  • Reality is a crutch for those who cant handle
    drugs. Lily Tomlin
  • Lets face it. A nation that maintains a 72
    approval rating on George W. Bush is a nation
    with a very loose grip on reality.
    Garrison Keeler
  • Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very
    persistent one. Albert
    Einstein

62
ONTOLOGY
  • The branch of metaphysics dealing with the nature
    of being, reality, or ultimate substance.
    Websters 3rd College Dictionary, 1994
  • The nature of existence in the world.
    Zahorik Jenison, 1998

63
(No Transcript)
64
(No Transcript)
65
REALITY
  • The totality of conditions or contingencies which
    limit the freedom of the individual.
  • Chaplin, J. P. (1975) Dictionary of
    Psychology.
  • I.e., constraints.

66
PRAGMATISM
  • A method in philosophy, started by C. S.
    Pierce and William James, which determines the
    meaning and truth of all concepts by their
    practical consequences.

67
DEWEYS PRAGMATISM
  • Deweys pragmatism is seen to be a radical form
    of realism a transactional realism in which
    instrumentation plays a subordinate role.
  • Knowing thus takes the place of knowledge, and
    thinking entails active involvement with
    independent reality, an involvement that is
    causally efficacious. Sleeper, 1986

68
REALITY
  • The totality of objective things and factual
    events.
  • Reality includes everything that is perceived by
    a persons special senses and is validated by
    other people. Freedman, Kaplan,
    Sadock, 1976

69
(No Transcript)
70
WAY BEYOND THE INFORMATION
  • A walker on a beach near Manukau was distressed
    to find what they thought was a severed penis and
    testicles.
  • The suspected male appendage was in fact a form
    of marine life.
  • Maybe seaweed, maybe some sort of anemone
  • but it was apparently very realistic, a police
    office said.

71
PSYCHOLOGICAL REALITY
72
PSYCHOLOGICAL REALITY
  • Scott Bender, of Phildelphia, fell asleep on a US
    Airways plane and snoozed through the landing and
    disembarkation.
  • He sued the flight attendents for negligence,
    contending that
  • he awoke on his own and was so startled by the
    dark, empty cabin
  • he believed the plane had crashed and thought he
    might be dead.

73
PERSPECTIVES ON REALITY
  • The solipsist imagines that there is no reality
    outside of his own mind,
  • while the realist flatters himself that what
    is in his head is all real.
  • Both suffer from the same disease.
    Weinberg, 1975

74
THE REALITY PRINCIPLE
  • The awareness of the demands of the environment
    and the necessity of conforming to those demands
    (Psychoanalysis).
  • Chaplin, J. P. (1975) Dictionary of
    Psychology.
  • The adjustment of the mental activities of a
    mature individual to meet the unavoidable demands
    of ones environment (Psychoanalysis).
  • Websters 3rd College Dictionary (1994).

75
PSYCHOSES
  • Mental disorder in which a persons capacity to
    recognize reality is impaired enough to interfere
    with his capacity to deal with the ordinary
    demands of life.
  • Freedman, Kaplan, Sadock, 1976

76
CHESS VS REALITY
  • Why such proximity between genius and madness in
    chess?
  • Chess is a monomania.
  • You study it intensively day and night from
    childhood if you are going to rise to the ranks
    of the greats,
  • and that kind of singular focus constricts your
    reality and makes you more vulnerable to
    distortions of it. contd

77
CHESS VS REALITY contd
  • A chess genius, wrote George Steiner, is a
    human being who focuses vast, little understood
    mental gifts and labors on an ultimately trivial
    human enterprise.
  • Almost inevitably, this focus produces
    pathological symptoms of nervous stress and
    unreality.
  • Charles Krauthammer TIME, May 2, 2005

78
PSYCHOTIC
  • A symptom is psychotic if it betrays
    misapprehension and misinterpretation of the
    nature of reality. Rycroft,
    1987 contd

79
AN EXAMPLE
  • Saddam Husseins psycho-profiles in the files
    of intelligence services suggest he is often
    bordering on being clinically psychotic.
  • CIA psychiatrists write His thoughts and
    speech can become almost uncoordinated,
  • and he has little or no contact with reality.
  • That is when he is at his most
    dangerous. Gordon Thomas, (2002),
    Sunday Express

How can they determine the extent to which his
thoughts and speech are uncoordinated??
80
For President Bush to have a credibility gap, he
would need to have some credibility in the first
place. Marc van Leeuwen Poitiers,
France
AND HIS OPPONENT
81
PSYCHOTIC contd
  • If, for instance, someone asserts that he is
    Napoleon, or emperor of Canada, or has had sexual
    intercourse with God, he is psychotic,
  • since such assertions are by common consent
    untrue and anyone making them seriously must be
    misapprehending the nature of reality and failing
    to distinguish between his fantasies and the
    facts of the case.

82
"I am big it's the pictures that got small!"
Aging silent movie queen Norma Desmond.
83
(No Transcript)
84
REALITY INTRUDES
  • If you live in a fantasy life, you have to come
    forward and confront reality.
  • Simone Doublette, 1995
  • Canterbury clinical psychology student who
    faudulantly claimed she had been abused by a
    satanic cult.

85
SELF EVALUATION VERSUS REALITY
  • No matter how positively we wish (or need) to see
    ourselves, self-evaluations are constrained by
    reality.
  • Desired conclusions about the self are difficult
    to maintain unless the individual can muster
    reasonable evidence to support them.
  • Although motivation may provide the spark for the
    positive illusions about the self, cognitive
    mechanisms keep them afloat. Suh, 1999

86
SELF-ESTEEM
  • Bailey Junior Kurariki, 13, who was convicted of
    the manslaughter of pizza delivery worker Michael
    Choy, is being held at Kingslea Residential
    Centre in Christchurch.
  • Kingslea manager Shirley Johnson said the media
    attention had affected him in a disturbing way.
  • "He's been on the front page as New Zealand's
    youngest killer and now he thinks that he's made
    it, that he's a big star.

87
CREATING FALSE MEMORIES
  • Memory can be treacherous, not only because
    forgetting is so easy but because the mind can
    mistake imagined scenes for reality.
  • Some people have sworn they remember traumatic
    events -- including childhood abuse and alien
    abductions -- that never occurred.
  • False memories can be implanted through
    deliberate or unintentional suggestions.
    Elizabeth Loftus, 1997

88
CHILDRENSREALITY
  • The childrens hit television series Thomas the
    Tank Engine shows too many crashes, and may make
    children frightened of going on a train says
    Brian Young, a psychology lecturer at Britains
    Exeter University.
  • Thomas the Tank Engine is aimed at a pre-school
    audience, who tend to be more likely to see the
    programme as a reality, Young said.
    contd

89
Thomas the Tank contd
  • Evidence showed that children who watch
    programmes that consistently portrayed the same
    image, tend to think there is more danger than
    actually existed.
  • As a result, there is a possibility that the
    sheer amount of crashes they see on Thomas could
    frighten them.
  • Seeing lots of crashes on TV means they could
    end up absolutely terrified of going on a train.

90
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • The world of physical reality does not consist of
    meaningful things.
  • The world of ecological reality does.
  • (contd.)

91
Ecological reality contd.
If what we perceived were the entities of physics
and mathematics, meanings would have to be
imposed on them. But if what we perceive are
the entities of environmental science, their
meanings can be discovered. Gi
bson, 1979
92
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • When we act, we act for a purpose we intend to
    accomplish some desired result. Whether or not
    we do achieve our intentions provides us with a
    measure of the adequacy of the psychological
    world in which we live.
  • The farmer, carpenter, or surgeon learns through
    repeated testing of his actions how to
    participate effectively in a chain of sequential
    events in order to experience the desired
    consequences of his behavior.
  • Ittleson,1960

93
(No Transcript)
94
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • Not only is ecological reality structured
    spatially and temporally, but it possesses
    affordances.
  • Perception has been limited to quality and
    structure, but Gibson, with the development of
    the idea of affordances, introduced the
    hypothesis that uses and meanings are
    perceived.
  • The meaning of an environmental feature is its
    function vis-á-vis the capabilities of an animal
    and these uses of the environment can be
    perceived. Lombardo, 1987

95
ALTERNATIVE DESCRIPTIONS OF A DRIVING
ENVIRONMENT
  • CONTEXT-FREE
  • --------------------------------
  • Clyde Road
  • lamp post
  • moving vehicle
  • University
  • --------------------------------
  • objects places
  • FUNCTIONAL (ACTION)
  • --------------------------------
  • path (follow)
  • obstacle (avoid)
  • collision (avoid)
  • destination (park)
  • --------------------------------
  • field of safe travel

96
A REALIZED AFFORDANCE
  • An affordance is not a property of the
    environment, but rather a property of the
    coupling of a user to a given environmental
    layout.
  • Flascher, Kadar, Garrett, Meyer,
    Shaw, 1995

97
THE CRITERION PROBLEM
  • Every kind of realism must have at least one
    criterion for determining when something is
    real.
  • E.g., consensual agreement among a group of
    people that they are having the same phenomenal
    experience.
  • What is the criterion for ecological realism?

98
ECOLOGICAL CRITERIA
  • Ecological reality is what I can do in the
    world.
  • I.e., what activities it will support, and what
    it can do to me that I may want to avoid.
  • Consequences are real, and provide feedback
    about my relation to the world.

99
REALITY TEST
  • Action is the criterion for the veridicality of
    perception. Volpert, 1985

100
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • Ecological reality is personalized and
    individuated by
  • Body scaling
  • Ability scaling
  • Opportunity
  • Information

101
Behavior The Control of Perception
  • Control theory explains what a goal is, how goals
    relate to behavior, how behavior affects
    perceptions, how perceptions define the reality
    in which we live and move and have our being.
  • Control theory is the first scientific theory
    that can handle all these phenomena within a
    single testable concept of how living systems
    work.
  • Powers, 1991

102
Control theory explains
  • what a goal is, how goals relate to behavior,
  • how behavior affects perceptions,
  • how perceptions define the reality in which we
    live and move and have our being.
  • Powers (1991)

103
Control theory cont.
  • Control theory is the first scientific theory
    that can handle all these phenomena within a
    single testable concept of how living systems
    work.
  • Powers (1991)

104
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • Affordances have a physical reality
    (geometric, kinematic, dynamic) that captures
    potential interactions of an individual with a
    object, substance, place, or event.

105
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • Something is real because
  • it supports our actions one can eat it, drink
    it, sit on it, walk on it, pick it up, write with
    it, hide behind it and
  • there are consequences of achieving it
    nutrition, reproduction and
  • there are consequences of not achieving it
    starvation, dehydration and
  • there are consequences of not avoiding it one
    can drown in it, fall off it, get hit by it, get
    cut by it.

106
ECOLOGICAL REALITY
  • Something has psychological reality when the
    affordance is detected, when it is effectuated,
    and when feedback about its support for the use
    intended and the goal desired is evaluated -- if
    the individual is still alive.
  • Affordances embody the coal face where evolution
    makes its selections.

107
He who lives by the swordfish...
  • A fisherman died in Acapulco after a swordfish
    he had hooked and was trying to haul out of the
    water speared him in the stomach.
  • The fisherman suffered a punctured intestine in
    the accident and died despite emergency surgery.

108
And he who lives by the snake
  • A gourmet chef in Vietnam died after being
    bitten by a venomous sea snake that he was to
    cook as the nightly special.
  • He picked up the half-metre snake from the
    glass aquarium, but it lashed around and bit his
    hand.
  • The snake dropped back into the tank, was
    retrieved by another chef and served to the
    waiting customer.

109
WHAT IS REAL IN VIRTUAL REALITY?
  • Information in stimulation.
  • Actions and interactions.
  • Psychological activities.
  • Psychodynamics.
  • Emotions.
  • Learning and transfer.

110
THE CHAIN OF CAUSALITY
  • Event in Environment
  • Stimulus
  • CNS Activity
  • Response

causes
causes
causes
111
THE CHAIN OF SPECIFICITY
  • Event in Environment
  • Ambient Array Structure
  • Perceiving

is specific to
is specific to
contd
112
THE CHAIN OF SPECIFICITY
  • Perceiving
  • CNS Activity
  • Acting, controlling

is specific to
is specific to
113
AFFORDANCES AND CAUSALITY
  • The fundamental hypothesis of ecological
    psychology is that affordances and only the
    relative availability (or non availability) of
    affordances create selection pressure on the
    behavior of individual organisms.
  • Hence, behavior is regulated with respect to the
    affordances of the environment for a given
    animal. contd

114
Affordances Causality contd
  • This hypothesis has many important implications.
    One of the most profound is that behavior (in the
    most general sense, including perception and
    cognition) is not caused.
  • Affordances are opportunities for action, not
    causes or stimuli. They can be used and they can
    motivate an organism to act, but they do not and
    cannot cause even the behavior that utilizes
    them. Reed, 1996

115
Affordances Causality contd
  • After September 11, many charged that
    Washingtons policies, especially towards the
    Middle East, had somehow caused the terrorist
    atrocity.
  • This is, of course, completely wrong, unless
    you argue that
  • a family causes a burglary simply by having a
    home,
  • or that the victim of mugging causes the
    mugging by walking down the street. Greg
    Sheridan, foreign editor, The Weekend
    Australian contd

116
Affordances Causality contd
  • A driver sets the occasion for theft by leaving
    the ignition key in the vehicle.
  • A tourist sets the occasion for being mugged by
    walking down a street in the wrong part of
    Christchurch at the wrong time of night.
  • The issue is not causality, but whether US
    policies and previous actions set the occasion
    for a terrorist response.

117
THE IMPORTANCE OF INFORMATION
  • To develop and support a theory of psychology, we
    need a theory of organisms.
  • To develop and support a theory of organisms, we
    need a theory of environments.
  • To couple the theories of organisms and
    environments, we need a theory of information.

118
SPECIFICITY DISTINGUISHES
  • The volatile parts of plants and animals are
    sometimes called essences by odor chemists.
  • This suggests the fact that the vapors of many
    things specify them, that is distinguish them
    from other things, and this is what I mean by
    information about things.
  • Gibson, 1967

119
INFORMATION REALISM
  • If invariants of the energy flux at the receptors
    of an organism exist,
  • and if these invariants correspond to the
    permanent properties of the environment,
  • and if they are the basis of the organism's
    perception of the environment,
  • then I think there is support for realism in
    epistemology as well as for a new theory of
    perception in psychology. Gibson,
    1967

120
AFFORDANCES AND INFORMATION
  • Every affordance names a category of potential
    encounters, and affordances provide a useful way
    of packaging event information into ecologically
    appropriate units for theoretical analysis and
    empirical study, in keeping with the
    functionalist approach of pragmatic realism.
  • Warren Shaw, 1985

121
INFORMATION SPECIFYING EGOMOTION
122
Warrens (1988) conceptualization of
theperception-action cycle
forces
laws of control
laws of physics
laws of ecological optics
123
INFORMATION AND PERCEPTION
  • The existence of optical information does not
    determine perception.
  • We are not slaves to the information.
  • Rik Warren, 1981

124
The ecological and cognitivist approaches to work
analysis.
Vicente, 1999
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com