Title: Sensation and perception
1Sensation and perception
2Sensory psychology
- How we know about the world
- General principles
- Transduction
- receptors
- Adequate stimulus
- Law of specific nerve energies
- Battery experiment
- Physical properties give rise to perceptual
features - Color is NOT a property of light
3Physical versus perceptual characteristics
- Need to determine relationship between physical
and perceptual characteristics - Vision light travels in waves
- Definition of wavelength
4Wave characteristic of light
Differences in wavelength are perceived as
differences in color
5Wave characteristic of light
A and B have same wavelength
B has higher amplitude
Differences in amplitude are perceived as
differences in brightness
6Relationship between physical and perceptual
characteristics of light
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8Visual transduction
- Cornea
- Light enters eye
- Pupil
- Contraction and dilation
- Iris
- Pigmented part
- Lens
- Focuses light on retina
9Visual transduction
- Optic disc
- How to find your blind spot
- Retina
- Photoreceptors
- Rods
- Cones
10Rods and cones
11Visual transduction
- Photochemicals in rods and cones respond to
light - Fire action potential
- Are carrots really good for your eyes?
12Properties of rods and cones
- Cones (about 7 million in each retina)
- Respond best to bright light
- Respond to color
- Difficult to see color in dark
- Rods (about 120 million in each retina)
- Respond best to dim illumination
- Do not respond to color
13From retina to perception
- Optic nerve
- Occipital lobe
- Feature detectors in the brain
- Respond (fire action potential) only for very
specific stimuli - Some will fire if see horizontal but not vertical
line - Some will fire if see L but not for straight
line
14Perception of letter t
15Summary of visual transduction
- Adequate stimulus for vision is light
- Enters the eye and is focused on retina
- Retina has receptors (neurons) with
photochemicals - Fire action potential when exposed to light
- AP to occipital lobe via optic nerve
16Color perception
- Not in the stimulus
- Species differences
- No brain no color
- Different brain different color
- Question What processes give PERCEPTION of
color?
17The spectrum of light
- White light combination of all colors
- ROYGBIV
- Longest to shortest wavelenths
- Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet
- Infrared and ultraviolet
18Theories of color vision
- Do not know exactly how perceive color
- Trichromatic theory (Young-Helmholtz)
- Found three different kinds of cones
- Each has different photochemical
- 3 different photochemicals respond best to 3
primary colors (red, green blue) - Any color can be made from combination of primary
colors
19Trichromatic theory of color vision
- Show a color (pink)
- All three cones types respond (fire)
- Cone type most responsive to red fires most
- Cone types most responsive to green and blue fire
less - INTERPRETATION of pattern is pink
20Examples of color perception
21Trichromatic theory and color blindness
- How does color blindness result according to
theory? - Selective color blindness
- Problems for the trichromatic theory
- After images
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24The opponent process theory
- Photochemicals in cones arranged in opposed pairs
- Red-Green
- Blue-Yellow
- Black White
- Colors oppose one another
- When see red prevents from seeing green
25The opponent process theory
26Opponent process theory
- Explanation for after images
27Factors affecting color blindness
28Hearing
- General questions same as for vision (and all
other senses) - What is adequate stimulus ?
- How does adequate stimulus get transduced (cause
action potential) - Physical properties map on to perceptual
characteristics
29Adequate stimulus
- Changes in air pressure
- Tuning fork example
- Compression and expansion of air molecules
30Physical properties of sound
- Changes in air pressure can be fast or slow
- Many or few cycles (compression-expansion) per
second (Hertz Hz) - Frequency
- Air pressure changes can be high or low
- Amplitude
- Measured in decibels (after AGB)
31Physical and perceptual properties of sound
32Relationship between physical and perceptual
features
33Different pitches
10,000 (10 kHz)
2000 Hz
200 Hz
16,000 Hz
34Species differences in perceiving frequencies
35Changes in loudness
Base sound
10 dB louder
20 dB louder
30 dB louder
36How to buy stereo speakers
37Decibel value of some sounds
38Pinna
39The outer ear
Pinna
- Pinna
- External auditory canal
40The middle ear
Pinna
- Tympanic membrane (ear drum)
- Ossicles hammer, anvil and stirrup
41The inner ear
Pinna
- The cochlea- filled with fluid not air
- Basilar membrane
- Hair cells on the basilar membrane
42Hair cells
43Transduction in the auditory system
- Changes in air pressure enter the external
auditory canal - Vibrate the tympanic membrane
- Vibrate the ossicles
- Ossicles bang on the cochlea
- Movement of fluid in cochlea
- Bending of hair cells
44The process of auditory transduction
45Hearing without hair cells
- Cochlear implants
- Electrodes implanted in cochlear next to auditory
nerve - Microphone (on belt) receives sound and transmits
to electrodes - Electrodes directly stimulate the auditory nerve
46Cochlear implants
47Cochlear implants
Normal
Implant
48Cochlear implants
- Who should get them
- Potential disadvantages
- Controversy in deaf community
49Factors that can affect hearing
- Things that cant control
- Age
- Gender
- Things that can control
- Noise
- Duration and amplitude both important
- Frequency
- What frequencies important for speech
- What frequencies noise damages
- Environmental noise vs. loud music
- walkman phenomenon
50Damaged hair cells
51Age and hair cell damage
52The minor senses
- Smell, taste, and touch
- Are they really minor
- Which sense would you LEAST like to lose
53Smell and taste
- Both chemical senses
- Adequate stimulus is specific chemical compound
- Smell
- Transducers are receptors in nasal passage
- Respond only to specific shape of chemical
compounds - Taste
- Transducers are taste buds on tongue
- Respond to 4 primary sensations
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55Tastes are interpreted
- Overall taste determined by combinations of
firing of taste buds - Taste after effects
- Similar to visual after effects
- Due to fatiguing of specific taste buds
- Drink distilled water after very sweet water
- Orange juice immediately after brushing teeth
56Age and taste
- Very young
- Prefer very sweet foods
- Older adults
- Lose sensitivity to sweets
- Many no longer like chocolate
57Smell
- Receptors in nasal passages respond to specific
chemicals - Humans relatively poor at identifying smells
- Large gender differences
- Males better at identifying
- Musk active ingredient in most perfumes
- Brut after aftershave
- Females better at
- Juicy fruit gum, coconut, and prune juice
58Pheromones
- What are they?
- Importance in other species
- Importance in humans?
- Coordination of menstrual cycles in women living
together? - Males 100,00 times more sensitive to musk than
women
59Perception
- Difference between sensation and perception
- Receptors transduce information (sensation)
- Brain interprets that information (perception)
- Prosopagnosia inability to recognize familiar
faces - Can identify facial features (nose, eyes, etc.)
- Cant recognize as Bob
60Depth perception
- Should we see in depth?
- Image on retina
- Binocular disparity
- Demonstration
- while holding finger near nose alternate
blinking - Move finger to arms length
- More computation needed when object closer
- Demo hard to demonstrate but here goes
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62Explanation of demo
- Created by combining two different views using a
special camera - When focus behind (relax or defocus) you can
reinstate the slightly different views - Brain will then combine
63Monocular cues to depth
- Can perceive depth even with one eye
- Based on experience in real world
- Size of retinal image
- In real world smaller images on retina mean
object is further - Can simulate this in two dimensions
64Retinal image as cue to depth
65Is the man in the blue shirt the same size in
both images?
Is the image of man in tie the same size?
With depth cues
Without depth cues
66Monocular cues to depth (contd)
- Texture gradients
- More densely packed regions appear to be further
67Monocular cues to depth
- Linear perspective lines in picture converge to
a vanishing point
68Monocular cues to depth
- Interposition one object blocking another
69Monocular cues to depth
- Motion parallax when moving more distant
objects move slower
70Summary of depth perception
- Depth is perceived (created by brain)
- Not in stimulus
- Stimulus is 2-D image on retina
- Cues we use based on experience in real world
- Both monocular and binocular cues
71Perceptual constancy
- Critical for maintaining constant perception of
world - Knowledge of world contributes to perception
- Two people stand next to one another
- One starts to move away
- We do not perceive the moving person as getting
smaller - Example of size constancy
- Know that people dont shrink
- So perceive constant size Despite change in
size on retina (image gets smaller as moves away)
72Example of shape constancy
- Image on retina changes as angle of opening
changes - Still perceive door as same
73Illusions
- Use assumptions we make to fool us
- Ames room example
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75Explanation of Ames room
- Assumption is that room is rectangular
- Actual shape is trapezoid
76Perceptual organization
- Idea of perception
- what you see is NOT necessarily what you get
- Perception based on
- Sensation
- Knowledge and experience
- Understanding how we organize our world
- Visual experience not just series of action
potential in rods and cones
77Gestalt Psychologists
- School lasted from 1920-1950
- Developed principles about how organize
perception - Many still hold today
- Some Gestalt principles
- Principles of perceptual grouping
- Figure ground relationships
78Perceptual grouping -similarity
79Perceptual grouping -principle of continuation
80Perceptual grouping - principle of proximity
- Is this organized in rows or columns?
81Perceptual grouping - principle of closure
- Complete stimuli to form objects
82Importance of figure-ground separation
- What is this a picture of ?
83Importance of figure-ground separation
- Importance of separating background and foreground
84Figure-ground confusions
- Ambiguous figures
- No clear cues to figure vs. ground
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86Pattern recognition
- Bottom up theories
- Pattern we see determined by features of object
- Similar to idea of feature detectors
- Biedermans Geon model
- Limited set of geons
- Combine to form all objects
87Geons and pattern recognition
88Importance of context
- Context surrounding elements, angle of viewing,
motion - Things other than the stimulus itself
- Bottom-up theories predict same stimulus, same
pattern - But not necessarily true
- Importance of context
89Context same stimulus different perception
90Effects of context the moon illusion
- Moon illusion
- Explanation of moon illusion
91The importance of context
Viewed as is faces are similar
Rotated 180
92The importance of context
A giant bird with a little person in mouth or a
man in a canoe being attacked by giant fish
93Motion as context
94Effects of context
- Context can make us see things that are not
really in the stimulus - Maybe most powerful effect of context
95Perception in infants
- Nature vs. nurture
- Importance of learning for perception
- Is there learning with sensation?
- Not all of one or the other
- Some likely nature
- Binocular disparity
- Some likely nurture
- Interposition, linear perspective
96Testing depth perception in infantsThe visual
cliff
97Learning and perception
- Visual cliff certain perceptual abilities
learned - Cochlear implants
- Sensations are not speech
- Can learn to interpret as speech
- Restored sight
- Blind learn to identify object by touch
- Operation to eliminate blindness
- Will they be able to identify object by sight
- Limitations on these studies
98Visual deprivation studies
- Normal kittens have neurons in occipital lobe
respond to diagonal lines - Effects of contact lenses that only allow kittens
to see vertical and horizontal (not diagonal
lines) - Remove prior to age of 3 months
- Remove after age of 3 months
99Visual distortion studies
- Glasses that invert the world
- Early effects
- Later effects
- Perceptual experience
- Video on inverted vision